Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Feb. 1, 1885, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
t. I 1 " , s. ' -- ... - ...x'.' i ... t j" PT f crslIEK'S ANIf OUNCKnutN T ' " THB MORNING STAR, the oldest - uallj MWj aper la North Carolina, Is published dally, exoept Monday, at $7 00 per year, $4 00 for six monUj, . 2 00 for three month flio for two monthB75o. ; ' or one month, to mall subscribers. Delivered to , ity subscribers at the rate of 15 cents per wee ; or any period from one week to one year.. - . -- THE WEEKLY STAB Is published every Friday morning at $160 per year, $100 for six months 60 - . aents for three months. v. : ' s: ADVERTISING RATES (D AlLY).-One eq ne day, $1 00 ; two days, $1 75 ; throe days, $2 60; oadaya, $3 00: five days, $3 60: one week, $4W wo weeks, $4 SO : three weeks $8 60 ; one Bronth, HO 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $24 00i tx months, $40 00; twelve months, $60 00. Ten 1nes of solid Nonpareil type make one square, . Alt announcements of Fairs, Festivals. Balls aops, Plo-Nlos, Society Meetings, Political Meet mrs Ac, will be oharged regula advertising rates - NnMnM nnA, haul nf "TStT Items' SO OentS P6 . tne for first Insertion, and 16 eenta per: line for .' --ach subsequent Insertion. Mo advertisements Inserted In Local Column at -ny price. . ; - ; ., , ... :i , '' r Advertlseinentinserted oaoe a week m Dally will-toe charged $1 00 per square for each Insertion. Every other day, three fourths of dally rate. ; Twice a week, two thirds of daily rate. An extra oharge wQl be made for donble-oolnma sr triplelumn advertlsemenia.4 - v 5 f v Notices of Marriage or Deafb. Tribute of Be ; -, speot, Resolutions of Thanks,' Ac, are. charged ' sor as ordinary advertisements, but only half raws when paid for striotly In advance. - At this rate ' V) cents will pay for a simple announcement of ' - : Marriage or Death. -' KAS A'-' Advertisements to follow reading matter, orW . looonpv any speolal place, will be oharged extra tcoording to the position desired ; . Advertisements on which no specified number of Insertions is marked will be continued till for bid," at the option of the publisher, and charged up to the date of dlsoontlnnanccf; ' ' Advertisements disoontmued before the time contracted for has expired, oharged transient . ates for time aotually published. . Advertisements kept under the head of 'New Advertisements" wQl be charged fifty per cent. extra. ' : Amusement, Anotlon and Official advertisement! one dollar per square for each insertion. ' - AH announoements and recommendations of - candidates f or office, whether in the shape of i aommunications or otherwise, will be oharged at . ' advertlsement&: . . i Payments for transient advertisements must be . made In advance. Known parties, or Strang er wlth proper reference, may pay monthly or quar ; terly, according V contract, r - : - ., - - Contract advertisers win not be allowed to ex 4 v oeed their space or advertise any thing foreign to their regular business without extra charge at transient rates. - ReTnlttances must be made by Check, Draft. Postal Money Order, Express, or in Registered Letter. Only such remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. I Communications, unless they contam Impor tant news, or discuss briefly and"properly subjects ; wanted: and. If accept- I atea ; ana, u able in everv other wv. thev will Invariably be I rejected if iherealnameoftheauthorls withheld. I Advertisers should always specify the issue or i specify the Issue or ssues they desire to advertise m. wnere no is sue is named the advertisement will be Inserted n the Dally. Where an advertiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him during the time his advertisement Is in. the nronrletor wlU only be responsible for the Dialling of the paper, to his ad The Morning Star. -- ByTIIAIAJg H. BERNARD. ; 1 . irii nrr-Krawn-Kr W n I t - I Satueday Eyenihg, Jak. 31, 1885. I TPWHTTKin TT'TlTTTTriTM TilE AGBICTJIjTUR Alt BOARD. I We have received from Mr. Mont- ford McGehee, Commissioner of Ag- riculture, his report "to the lVegisla . tare. ; It occupies twenty-five printed pages and is full, clear, and instruc tive. The subjects discussed are the following : ... Illustrative .Exhibits; Phosphate Explorations; Coal 'Ex plorations ; Immigration ; Fish, and Fisheries; Fertilizer Supervision; Spe cial Duties. He says "the great need of the State "may; be summed in the two words, immigration and capital." He gives a full-review of the exhibits at Boston, Raleigh and New Orleans. He discusses the phosphate explora- tions. with which: our readers have v a ii..1. xri considers at length the coal fields and explorations. We quote one instruct tive paragraph: J and those of Rockingham and 8tokes have of great wealthio' the State.sjlttuch.has been written about them. The outcrops of the former were traced by'Dr. JSmmonsi Jor thirty miles, and from indications, he judged extended ten miles more. - One of the seams is six and lialf feet thick. .The area, as calculated ; by Emmons, is 800 square .miles. ' The lighting and heating power of this coal has been tested and found equal to that of the best in market.! "Seams of coal have beeirloundin Rocking-' ' ham and Stokes three and four feet thick. : Professor Kerr says the outcrops show that the coal. is. continuous through the whole .length of the belt in this Statewhich is above 'thirty miles. 'All the ; coal of the Southern' States is distinctly bituminous; , latter are semi-bituminous the nearest ap proach to. anthracite that is to be found southjotPennsIvaniaj nJtrr - The Board of .Agriculture has em- ployed Dr. H. M Chance, of Phila-j delphia at a cost of $2,500, to make, a piBiiuuiuary eAuouuituuu io -' aoucr- fctainJfthe osVof aTqmplete explori-, tiou -i uv iuv -voai neias. rte pegan worK on me sin or uiy iast.s rne report says: - .' ?3 ; ' "The Deep River 'Coal" Field has been - fully explored, a large number of shafts having "been sunk to the depth of irova i.thuty, to forty feet, tin? the bottoms of - many of which borings were made to an equal depth. The Dn River7 Coal Field! is now. undergoing, a similar exploration,! When the latter is' completed full reports' of each of these explorations, accompa- nied by maps, will be published. - It 'may be stated - now, that seams of - coal have, . been discovered of sufficient . thickness for; a larger domestic supply; and of a quality! v weu aaapiea ior use in tne arts. The ex- tent to which these coal. deDOsits are Im- mediately available is at length made " It has been tested that the. mines at Egypt can be - worked - and the j coal be made ready' for market at a cost of $1.45 per ton. : 'Dr.- Chance thinks that thoTobat could be mined for f 1.20 to$1.30periton; Itoan be delivered at.-Raleiarh for $3.20 r.Prt.nn- Wf, Vonfl, A -r per ton in Wilmington f or' Vitumin - l he AgricultureDepartment has ex- ; pended for hatching, fish in the years, " 1883-4,, $17,542. Tb-e '.experiments1 ' rittvA haan WAmmr n,.ASkAnar..l . IL 1 , UCBU mij DU)UCS01U(a asks' : zor a removal ot restrictK uPon its action so it can operate at will as o wme ana piace. - , ' The Commissioner refers at lengtb to immigration and says: " I "The tosxhinery ' for iminigrutioiris sim-1 pie and effective, v There is .an- agent forr immigration, whoaa' offlce is in lie Depart ment building. , Sub agents are established ; by him in several otithe Northern Slates, and at many points in each of these States. The business of these sub-agents is to dis seminate information about the- State, by tlistributingtherpublications ofxhe Depaft- ment, ana pamphlets and circulars special ly prepared for the purpose. In addition, condensed statements, giving the most im portant facts in regard to the soil and cli-' mate and productions statements occupy ing a column or more are published week ly: in' 125 ; newspapers in the Northern States all of which have a good and many of them a large circulation." The . present Commissioner, ? Mr MoGehee, is "well qualified for his office. A gentleman of . uncommon cultivation for our section; a man of observation and experience an agri- Culture; a man of travel, of reading and of thought; a most refined and courteous citizen ; a man of marked ability,familiar with -public men and public affairs; a man of application, of broad views, of true devotion to his native Carolina, he is' eminently the right man for the place he so ably fills. i A word more. Ought not the Le gislature to elect a State Geologist? Why I not? After having had one for thirty years is it a time to dis pense with one when the State is ad vancing on the highway of progress; when so many appliances are being devised and applied for the attract ing of capital and Northern immi grants, and when we are sending out our varied productions to the North anrl t.nt.h Snntritb.att.rifiVTriav Ha pt- J J hibited along with those of Other a.tAa9 TVio tKt. .JfiVon Pennsylvania has been employed at a cost of $2,500 for a specific work is probably evidence enough that a competent and energetic Geologist is needed by the State from year to year. A MAD SLANDERER. Mr. Cable is becoming irate. He is not content to kick back when sharply criticised for his betrayal of the South but e misrepresents, not designedly we must hope, the senti ment of the Southern people. - He was in Chicago recently, when he he reported: "It is as if you had kicked a bee hive and the bees had rushed out to see what damage was done and what was going to come of it. In this connection there is a point I must make regarding the newspa pers of the south. .Nine-tenths of the Southern people are voiced by a lot of job printers. Now every criticism we have thus far seen in Southern papers was from a reputable daily. Such papers as the Baltimore Day, the Norfolk Ledgert the Charleston News and Courier, the Atlanta Constitution, the Savan nah News. "and so on, have rebuked him for his infatuation and folly. Mr Cable was once him8elf ,"P6rt- I er on a New Orleans paper, and he ought to be above misrepresentation, The "job printers" have had nothing to do with the severe and deserved a. mi e cautery ne nas receivea. i ne otae, m nat t said, spoke more in sorro w than in anger. It confesses to dis appointment, because Mr. Cable is thus far the most exquisite artist and the rarest genius in prose the South has produced, and in this we do not even except Poe. His stories are very much praised in the North, and have been highly relished in the South by peo ple of the highest culture. - He has not been underrated by the leaders of thought, but he has j disappointed his people, and they are both shocked and mortified. Henceforth they will take much less interest in his produc- I tions and successes. He may as well go I -North and live amonjg a people who i ouartj in uia political senuments ana I hail him as the evangel of the negro i . mr. james Jrneian, in amaniy arti- I cie in tne Uhicago uurrenl, says this : w . "inr, cable's sin nas been the sin Deroe- trated not against the idols themselves, but; against this sentiment of reverence. The sentiment that still lingers around the 'Lost Cause' is one of the factors of nation al': life in the entire South. Mr. Cable. I say, has sinned against this sentiment. It is not necessary that the priest who sees the graven image broken should defile the .tern pie in which he had served. To de mand, that -the South yield this sentiment is to aemana ma. destruction or a human characteristic that produced the noblest displays of. courage and he roism daring, the war itself. It was this very sentiment that sent forth the wild and almost heart-broken cheers from the breaking ranks of the Confederate ar-i my, when Gen. Grant refused to receive the ; sword of Gen. Lee. ?When. therefore, it is said, that Mr. Cable, under the cover of a most delicate and graceful styie, nas sinnea nagrantiy against this sen timent, all that well can be said has been said This fact has chilled the exuberant sectional pride with which the South greet ed the successive chapters of "The Grandis simesft. This feeling of restrained coolness " ueen "ecreaeea oy suosequent nas not oeen decreased : L:i When Mrv Cable expresses anxiety .that the South is in danger of beins Africanized he ' probably does so be- cause he trusts - the figures of a class of writers in the -Northern b'terary " - , . . I periodicals, who have some very wild ngnres aoout tne increase of the ne- , groesi , But other writers have dis- I credited those T figures, as we have shown in . these odlamni..-NMr. Cable not only asks J for edaoation for the negroes, but for social equality. The cen8na of 1840. 1850 and 1860-does I not authorize: the extravagant 'specu lations based upon the census of. 1880. Mr. Kennedy was the superintendent of. the census in I860.. .rHepresejj ted an able report on the negrp' IJe. showed this: that for 'five decades the negro had been -di mi hih t ng in ratio of increase. Note that. Here are his-figures U I - Ratio of increase ; of negroes. 1,37.68; ; ...37.60 ..........23L41 . .26 62 I ..22.07 ? 1800-1810.... 18101830 .... 1830-1830.... 18301840...;, 18401850 .. . . 1850-1860...., 1'The rate of the increase of the negro, ' says Mr. Kennedy, "is rapidly diminish ing, and it will continue to uiminisn eacn tyear." : v'-s ".u"-- -:fcJsfr He said in 1860 that in 1880 the negro population would be 6,618,350. Mark you, he ventured to prophecy twenty years in advance. Now what was the population of the negroes in 1880 according to the census? It was 6,580,793. Mr. Kennedy came within less than one-half of 1 per cent. He knew what he v was writing about. The whites in the - South ill be oer tain to take care of the negro ques tion and that too without neurro equality with it. The son-in-law of the greatest American writer, Nathaniel Haw thorne, is an accomplished author himself. His name is George P. Lathrop, and his last fiction is loca ted in North Carolina and is said to be interesting and strikingly origi nal. . He seems to hare struck a new. vein, if we may judge from criticisms upon it. The Chicago Current says of it: "Whatever the story called 'True' may lack, it is not the virtue of originality. It begins with the disappearance, in the North Carolina forests, two centuries ago, or a party of English colonists, among them a girl, 'whose eyes were gray and whose lover, left behind, came over to loin her. only to find no trace of her or her fellow- pioneers. This episode forms the oner prologue, as it were, to a romance of the North Carolina coast alter the Civil war. The story embodies a carefully-drawn pic ture of the life of the region,- which Is, as among other American localities, alto gether unique. The character studies, both individually and collectively, are the essen tially strong points. There Is a most artis tic grouping of types, and the reader finds much entertainment in tne contrasts. Assassins that would kill women and children would not scruple to de stroy a great library. It is said that the dynamiters are threatening to blow up the British Museum that contains one of the grandest libraries in the world and some of the most interesting: remains of antiquity. If this great collection of books, ' &c, were to be destroyed it would be the greatest loss the world has sustained in that way since the library at Al exandria was mostly destroyed in the time of Julius Caesar and afterwards kv the Saracens. The bloody mis- creant8 in England are anxious to I mala thai noma infamnno ivQt I 1 tratu8 did when he burnt the famous I Ephesian temple. Mr. Seymour has bee n giving ex I pression to some opinions about pub- lie matters. We always read with interest what he says. He is a pure and wise statesman and his words should be weighed always. He warns his party friends against ex pectmg too mucn or tne incoming President. He thinks the Tariff should be promptly and squarely dealt with. Upon it he thinks the next Presidential contest will hinge to a considerable extent. He thinks also that the Government , should compel certain subsidized railroads to comply to " the . letter with their contracts. ; Mr. J. -B. Sargent, of Massachu- setts, employs from 1,000 to 2,000 men in manufacturing. He has been all along a warm Protectionist. The New York Times says of his recent address in Boston on the Tariff: "He has proved his capacity and skill by his success, and has been engaged for quarter or a century in ms business, and now employs irom l.uuo to a.uw men. and from being a protectionist has be come an opponent of protection after pa tient investigation in person of the foreign neid and long study or tne neid at home, The address is so comprehensive in scope. so - complete in analysis, so clear in ar rangement,' and sd logical and cogent in reasoning, that no one can consider himself fairly informed on the present condition of this important question who has not read n." ' "A North Carolina man who has lust Sold his tobacco crop from five acres for $684, thinks that it pays to raise it if it doesn't to smoke it." Boston Poet. Wo. inform our respected contem porary that North : Carolina often produces $300, $400, and sometimes :asmuch is 1600 to the one acre.1 We have known .one laborer to make f 1,700 on tobacco alone at one1 crop These are facts. There - is a fine golden leaf' tobacco:, belt that beats the world. . ' J. ' ' " V " Already some of- the Northpm Legislatures are' beginning to take faction concerning the manufacture of dynamite.'. . .There are two bills be- tore the legislature ot New - xoric, and one before" the ( Legislature of Connecticut. ;v The manufacture . of. explosives jugbt tobe jpufiishable wiirvery great sevBTiiyi"1 a ne wu necticut plan is to make manufac turers: and vendors of dynamite take Xjuxt aJioens'e.-v-'T';j.' ' r - "The poems of- that true? genius of the South, the slale?Sidney Tianier, are attracting more attention than ever before. The volume justpub liahed v by the Soribners is . roeetina.- with a cordial reception Kev. Dr. Lafferty, ..the very gifted editor of the Riphmond Advocate, , says of them: s' : ; "This 19 a, filtine tribute to the memory of the sweet' singer of Our Southland, for such he was, in his short life. . It is almost a marvel that, under-all the trying clrcum stances of poverty and affliction, he pro duced, so much that is really valuable. In the 'good time coming the name of Sidney Lanier will take its Dla.ce in the list of the great poets of America. His soul was filled with the delights of music and poetry. : THE LEGISLATURE Raleigh Visitor's Repdrt. SENATE. Thuesdat, January 29. Petitions werehpresented by several Senators, which were properly re ferred, ' Reports from standing and select committees were presented and pro perly referred. Bills were introduced and referred to the proper committees. ; CALEXDAB. Bill to amend section 3,850 of the Code. Passed. Bill to amend chapter 140, laws of 1883, in regard to killing wolves in certain counties. Passed. Bill to amend section 2,040 of the Code in regard to the summoning of jurors to lay off public roads. Passed. Bill to amend chapter 37, laws ot 1883 for the relief of sheriffs was amended and passed its third read- mg. SPECIAL ORDER. Bill in regard to filing caveats to wills, passed. Mr. White, to establish and main tain a house of refuge and correc tion. Referred to committee on Ed ucation. Mr. Hill, -by consent, to facilitate election or justices of the peace in the different counties of the State. Rules were suspended and the bill put upon its several readings. Mr. Buxton, to amend section 2067 of the Code, relating to the eligibility of persons to the office of sheriff. Bill to enable railroads and other transpartation companies to extend their lines and aid in their construe tion in the State, was ordered printed and made the special order for I hurs day next at 12 m. Senate adjourned. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES INTRODUCTION OP RESOLUTIONS AND BILLS. Mr. Thorp, bill to repeal part of chapter 367, laws 1883, relating to fence laws. Mr. Slaughter, bill in relatian to the correction of a grant. Mr. Thompson, om concerning public surveyors. Mr. Jones of Buncombe, bill to amend the revenue law. Mr. King, bill to amend Section 2,019 of the Code, in regard to pub-; lie roads in Unslo w county, Mr. Busbee, bill to encourage and promote' the industrial development of the colored people of North Car olina. - . , .. CALENDAR. Bill to .. amend Sec. 832 of the Code, in reganl to summons of jus tices of the peace,, referred 'to joidici ary committee. 7- : , " n The; special order, being , bill to provide relief for Confederate sol diers,! was taken up . and considered by sections. - Passed second "reading and made special order for next Tuesday. Mr. Robinson; introduced by con -sent a resolution relating to con vie t labor. O DR. STATE CONTKTXPOR ABIES. We see that the bill to prevent the sale of pistols in this Btate has been tabled by the Legislature. We do not know the provis ions of the bill, but if it prohibited the im portation and sale or pistols in north Caro Una it should - have become a law. We have a statute that prohibits the carrying of concealed weapons, and yet you will find in every country store and many of the city stores a full and varied stock of pistols from the most insignificant to the very best Bmitn & Wessen. all will Kill, however, and do damage. Tbey are sold indiscrimi nately to any and Everybody who has the money to pay for them, , As soon as these pistols are sold, nine times out of ten they are loaded in the presence of the seller and at once concealed. Is thiB a .violation of the law 1Danbury Eeporter. It should be the policy of all legislators to seek the cause of crime, and having as certained it, to apply the corrective by pro hibiting those acts which result in the com mission 'thereof. Every chase of civiliza ttonj'with its social, o&oial and political im proven t, brings with it corresponding evils bu iruojesome proDiems. ii is me pari 01, wise statesmanship to conserve that which: is good and eliminate that which is evil: to encourage ; the spirit of liberty,; but dis courage tne spirit or license;' to encourage that noble,: elevating and inspiring desire for' education, enlargement and extension of knowledge by reading but to discourage the base and corrupting tendency tq fill the mica ana corrupt the heart with vicious. wicked and debasing literature which bad men scatter broadcast over our land. Sen ator Connor; in tM State Senate. But it is very clear that the roads have got to be reformed, and it is very clear in our opinion mat tney will not be 'made gooa unm the state takes the matter, in nana ana : mates them good with the pro "Ceeds of - taxation. The- employment of convict labor is but- the employment of taxes: and a most useful emDlovment o .them,, too. . What taxes may be necessary how much convict labor may be available how the. system shall set going and to what extent, are matters altogether bevnnd the Register's depth Just;;' now. fiaieigh TUE LATEST NEWS; WTn r- hi S ;? EpRElGlt. 'Stl . Reported. Plana- .of the Dyjaamltar - i Tne Bank of England Threatened. p. iBy Cable to the Morning Star.1 -Lokdoh. .January. 81. Sir. William V.1: Barcourt, Home Secretary, to-day received a. letter.inlwhicu is alleged tnat an exien-i sive dynamite plot is being hatched, and mentioning a numoer oi ouuaings me ay ua miters intend to blow up.; Italso gives the names of, several of V the :v plotters and the places at which they can be fouhd. Extra euards have been placed on duty at the Bank of England, in consequence of .threats, having; been made to brow-up the building. The police are making, an inves tigation. j " ' FEN N SYLVAN I A. flu Explosion Slx;o People Killed Twenty Injured and Several Hornet Wrecked. iHr Telegraph to the Mornlns: Star.l I'ittsbubo. Jan. .31. -Three explosions of natural gas occurred this - morning near Thirty-fourth streetroU Pennsylvania Ave-. nue. Six people are reported killed, twen ty injured and six to eight houses wrecked.' TENNESSEE. Two cblldrenPerlsn in a Bnrnlns Building;. IBy Telegraph to the Horning Star. Chattanoooa, January 31. A special from Morristown, states that the dwel ling of John Sanf ord caught fire and was' burned to the ground yesterday. Two of his children could not be rescued and per ished in the flames. - COTTON. A Summary of tne Crop to Date. Br Telegraph to the Horning Star.l NbW Yobk, Jan. 81. Receipts of cot ton for all interior towns, .85,892 bales; re ceipts from plantations, 68,087 bales; total visible supply of cotton for the world, 8,058.848 bales, of which 2,596.048 bales are American, against 8.881,410 and 2,778, 010 bales respectively last year; crop in sight 4.863,697 bales. FINANCIAL. New York Stock Alark et Prices Un- settled. Bv Telegraph to the Morning Star. New Yobs. Wall Street, Jan. 81, 11 A.M. Stocks were lower in the early trading to day, but outside of Missouri Pacific, St. Paul and Canadian Pacific the decline was unimportant. Delaware & Hudson fell of If to 68, Lackawanna U to 87. Missouri Pacific to 94f , St. Paul 1 to 70, and Canadian Pacific 1 to 87. The mar ket was affected by a cut in east-bound passenger fares by the Trunk lines, and by a reported contemplated reduction in coal prices by the Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany. Near 11 o'clock a stronger feeling prevailed, and under the leadership of the Union Pacific there was a rally of i to f per cent. PERSONAL. Mr. Sala refused to lecture in Washington the other night because the audience was so scant. A daughter of Dr. Talmage is said to be one of the. prettiest girls in Ame rica. Funny, isn't it 1 Boston Post. Henry James is said to bear a striking resemblance to the Prince of Wales. Each has our most heartfelt sympathy. Boston Post. " ' Mr. Walker Blaine is intensely mad because he was not made a Judge of the Court of Alabama Craims. Wash. Letter in Hartford Times. As the time approaches when Mr. Evarts will make his maiden speech in the Senate a kind of awe-stricken gloom settles down upon the mind of the nation, Phil Record. Mrs. Garfield, the widow of the late President, was sued in the Common Pleas Court in Cleveland yesterday by Mrs. Thankful Tanner for $25,000. Mrs. Tani ner was run over by Mrs', Garfield's car riage on December 23 while in the public square and she now alleges that she was seriously injured. . A Ida wltli Six Wlvea. A man with six wives is likely to go to jail for, bigamy, which, after all, may not be much more disagreeable than trying to live with six Women at a time. Either course is not more disagreeable than to be afflicted with dyspepsia and liver com plaint' Frank Jones, of Cothrans. Texas, writes, "I am using Brown's Iron Bitters for dyspepsia and debility, and it has done me a great deal of benefit." Any other man may receive similar advantage. It also cures malaria, weakness, neuralgia, etc ., t : IBPOIITANT! A NEW AND VALUABLE DEVICE A PATENT Water Closet Seat! FOR TUX . CURB OF HEMORRHOIDS, (Commonly called "PUJES,") Internal or External, and PROLAPSUS ANI, for Chil dren or Adults. NO MEDICINE OR SURGICAL NECESSARY. OPERATION I have Invented a. S1MPLB WATER CLOSET SEAT, for the cure of the above troublesome and painful malady, which I confidently place before the public as a SURE RELIEF. AND CHORE ! It has been endorsed by the leading resident Physicians In North Carolina. Is now beta tint ed in the Hospitals of New York. Philadelphia tutu jMutimure, hbh ire are sausnea tn result will be satisfactory, as it has never failed else where. You can write to any of the Physicians orpromlnent citizens In Edgecombe Co., N. O. - These Seats will be famished at the lollowhur t)TiO8! WAJJTOT, Polished, T f.00 Discount to Physl CHXRRY, . . 6.00 V otoians and to the POPLAR,' - SOof 'TTadeT ; Directions for uslnjr will accompany each Seat. We trouble you with no certificates, We leave' the Seat to be Its own advertiser. Address , , LEWIS CHAMBERLAIN Patentee, The Only Way rpo GET A GOOD .SECOND-CLASS SHAVE, HATR-CUT orSHAMPOO.ls tO'gptOH. C. PRE1C PERT'd SenClass SaWn, No. 7 South Front Street. ALBEST PRE H PERT and W. J. 8TU i ART. two First .Clan anflrai1!luu.- gether with the Proprietor, always on hand to erveyon.. .:' jan tf 5 The Central Protestant A WEEKLY RELIGIOUS AND FA VTT.T 'winra xpaper and the Organ cf the Methodist Protes tant Church In "North Carolina, Is imbuahed- at Terms. S3 00 BSMiamUaailniiM' The ellaibllltv of Its location. activity of its agents, and the constantly morcas tna; demand for it among- the more solid classes of readers In various sections, tve ta CENTRAL rjwijwsi An i-pwnuw claims upon the patron age of the advertterngpubUo;- Terma very favor able. Consult your business tatereet, and address J. L. inCHAUX, . . Greensboro N. Ci COMMERCIAL W i L M INOTON MARK FT . f .. . S STAR OFFICE; Jan. 31. 4 P. M. f SPIRITS TURPENTnTE The market was uotlcUsteady at 27f centajjr gallon; with no sales reported. ' iROSIN The market was quoted quiet af ftTK) for Strained and $1 02 for Good fkrt9ewithain as. ofered, -....r't m 4!TAR The ..market was quoted firm ; at .$1 10 per Lbl. of 280 lbs .with-salea at quo tations. ... ... ; CRUDE TURPENTINE Market firm. with sales reported at $1 15 for itard and- l $1 75 for Virgin and Yellow Dip." .. . r ; COTTONThe market was quoted firm, . with small sales reported .on , a basis of 10 ll-16cents per ft for MiddUng. The following were Jhe olficial quotations : Ordinary. . . V. . . I'.V 8 7-16 cent! &. Ghod Ordinary.... .. 9 11-16 ' " Low Middling... 104 Middling........ .....10 1W6 ' V- Good Middling.... .. 10i " " ' ' PEANUTS Sales -? reported at . 556a cents for Extra - Prime, 65 70 cents for 'Fancy, and 7580 cents for Extra Fancy. Market steady, RICE Rough: Upland 90c$l 05; Tidewater $1 101 25. Clean: Common 4f cents; Fair 4f5i centsj Low Good 5i 5i cents; High Good 5f5i cents; Prime 5f5f cents; Choice 5$6 cents per lb. Market steady. itECEITTS. Cotton. ... Spirits Turpentine. 258bales 192casks 504 bbls Kosln.. ........... Tar . . 218 5 bbls bbls Crude Turpentine. . DOIJIESriC UIABK.EXS MnahetaL By Telegraph to the Mornlnjc Star.l Naw Yokk. Jan. 31. Noon. Money better at 1H per cent. tJterring exchange 483i483f and 486i4861. State bonds dull. Governments lower. Commercial. Cotton auietwith sales to-day of 14 bales; middling uplands llic; do Orleans life. Futures dull, with sales to-oay at tne fol lowing quotations: January 11.13c; Feb- . r - -r v. an.. A m,i H 4 1 r.. rusry ij..iu; juuvu ajjiu n.tn,, May 11.51c; June 11.61c. Flour dull and unchanged. Wheat higher. Corn un changed. Pork dull at $13 2513 50. Lard weak at $7 12. Spirits turpentine steady at 31i31ic. Rosin steady at $1 251 30. Freights steady. ' Baltimore, Jan. 31. Flour dull at quotations: Howard street and western super $2 753 15; extra $3 253 75; family $4 005 00; city mills super $2 75315;extra $3 253 75; Rio brands $4 75; Patapsco family $5 50; superlative patent $5 75. Wheat southern steady and auiet: western firmer and auiet: southern red 9496c; do amber 9798c; No. 1 Ma ryland 93ia94c; No. 2 western, winter red on spot 88(a89ic. Corn southern nomi nal; western spot higher; futures steady; southern white 5156c: do yellow 5153c FOREIGN fflAHKETd. IBy Cable to the Morning Star.l Liverpool. January 31. Noon. Cotton dull and 'prices generally in buyers favor; uplands fid; Orleans 64d;sales of 5,000 bales, of which 500 were for speculation and ex port; receipts 19,000 bales, of which 17, 900 bales were American. Futures dull at a decline; uplands, 1 m c, January delivery 6 l-64d; February and March delivery 5 $0-645 61-64d; March and April delivery 6 2-646 l-64d; April and May delivery 6 7-646 5-64d; May and June delivery 6 9-64d; June and July delivery 6 13-454d. Tenders 700 bales new docket; 1 old docket. 1 P. M Uplands. Lin c February de- lrvery 5 Bl-64d, sellers' option; February and March delivery 5 61-64d, sellers' op tion; March and April delivery 6 l-64d,; value; April and May delivery 6 6-64d, sellers' option; May and June delivery 6 9-4d, sellers' option; June and July de livery 6 13-64d, sellers' option; July and August delivery 6 16-64d, value. ... Sales of cotton today include 3,800 bales American. ' A Card. To all who are suffering from errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay,, loss of manhood,' &c, I will send a recipe that will cure you tree of charge. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South Amer ica. Send self -addressed envelope to Ray. Joseph T. Inxah. Station D. New York. BURR & BiilLEY, ..... 19 & 21 South Front St, WILMINGTON, N. C. r ' , SUCCESSORS TO HART, BAILEY CO. , JjV)UNDRY, MACHINE SHOP AND COPPER: WORKS; MANUFACTURERS OF ENGINES,' BOILERS, SAW AND GRIST MILLS, IRON AND BRASS CASTINGS. " '.I; , ' y, TURPENTINE STILLS AND COPPER WORK; A SPECIALTY. , SEND FOR OUR PRICES ON COPPER WORK BEFORE ORDERING ELSEWHEPE. JanH tf CARLTON HOUSE, farsair, Dnplin County, H. C. ' QNUNE OF WILMINGTON AND WELDON' Railroad, E5 miles from Wilmington. ' j Table always well supplied . with the best the country affords. Rates of Board very reason a ble, - ' H. J. CARLTON, deo81DAWtf - ;: Froprletbr. Oysters. ;0yster t FINE LOT OP.FRESH OT8TESS JTJST .RE oeiyed. WINES, LIQUORS, LAGER, BEER, CI GARS, &c. at STAR SALOON, No. 13 Market 8t. GEO. F. HERBERT, Proprietor.; oct7tf The :;Haniiiiig TMes, j- -: . . - . PUBLISHED BT H. L DiEB, Jr. ,;;at HANNlNS, S. (?. , Only 11.60 per annum In advance, vertisug medium. Cheap Ad Jan 8 tf The Home Journal, , PUBLISHED EVEET FRIDAY FORKING ., : At Wsurremtonylf. . f 5 JOHN- W.VHICKS, EDITOR AND PROPRD2TOR. - It has a splendid circulation in the counties of Warren, Vanoe, Halifax, N. C., and Mecklenburs; ; va. as an aaverusing medium Ills unsurpassea. Terms $1.60 a rear In advanch. - - Address . THB HOME JOURNAL. auStf Warrenton. N. a s :S-:Ut -.CM. zi lii' c 25 YEARS -IN USET The Greatest Medical Trinmph of tha Ag9; SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. , Lrtssof appetltet Bowels costive, Pain 7- - the head, wlth,a dall eensation in tk. - back j part, Pain ton der the hoid. blade, PallmMa after catlns:, with a dilT lnclinatioat exertion of body or 0117 Irritmbilityof temper low spirits, with "affeUngof bavintneg-lected somedatV . Weariea, Dizziness, Flattering: at til Heart Dots) before the eves, Headach s ever the rlht eye Restlessness, with fitful dreams, Highly colored Urine, and CONSTIPATION, j XUTT'S PIIXS are especially adartei to aueh' cases one, dose effects such ; change Of feeling as to astonish the sufferer ' TheylnereweUie AppeUte.and cause thft body to Take on meshthua the system!; nearitliedri and by their Tonic Action on the JDisostive OrKsou,ReKular Stools m produced. Price Se. 44 Murray St..iv.v TUfF'S EXTRACT SiRSAPlRILLJ Renovates the body, makes healthy flesT - strengthens the weak, repairs the wastesof ' the system with pure blood and hard muscle- - tones -the nervous system, invigorates the brain, and imparts the .vigor of manhood, SI. -Sold by druggists. N FFICE 44 Murray St., New YofV jan33D&Wly su-we fr Jan 30 WHEAT BAKING POWDER. . PURE and WHOLESOME. It'oont&ins no Injurioas ingTedienta. It leaves no deleterious substances in the bread u all pure grape Oream of Tartar and Alum powiera It restores to the flour the highly important can." Stituents rejected in the bran of the wheat It makes a better and lighter biscuit than am other baking powder. ' MARTIN KALBFLEISCH'S SONS, Established 1829. . 55 FULTON ST., N. Y. For sale by all leading Grocers. dec 21 Sm su wed fr A CHILD My little son, now seven years- old, broke out when a babe three weeks with what the doctors called eczema, beginning on his hea l and gradu ally spreading over his whole body. He was treated for five years or more by various physi cians without relief ..-and the little boy's health was completely broken down. About a year am I was induced to use-on him Swift's specific, and two bottles cured him sound and well, and there has been no sign of a return of the disease, - - P. O. HOLME8. Talbottdn, Ga.. Sept. 12. 1834. Poisoned by a Nurse. Some eight years, ago I was inoculated with poison by a nuree who infected my babe with blood taint. The little child lingered along until It was about two years old when its little life was yielded up to the fearful poison. Forn long years I have suffered untold misery. I mt covered with sores and ulcers irom head to ioot, and in my great extremity'I prayed to die. No language can express my feeliDgs of woe during those long six years. I had the best medical treatment. Several physicians successively treat ed me, but ail to no purpose The Mercury and Potash seemed to add fael to the awful flame which was devouring me. About three months ago I was ad-l "T'r1 BO- an(l I vised to try! Lw Li LJ I felt hope Swift's Spe- M fJ M jagainre-. cifio. We did vive in mj breast; but, alas ! alas ! we had spent so much for medical treatment that we were too poor to buy it. Oh 1 the agony of that moment! Health and happiness within your reach, but too poor to grasp it. I applied, however, to those who were able and willing to help me, and I have ta ken Swift's Specific, and am now sound and well once more. Swift's Specific Is the best blood purifier in the world and the greatest blessing of the age. MBS. T. W LEfl. Greenville, Ala., Sept. 4. A Druggist for 2 5 Tears. Auburn, Ala., Sept. 8, 1884 1 am an old phar macist, and have had to do largely with blood diseases for oyer twenty-five years. I have dealt In all kinde of blood purifiers, and do not hesi tate to say that Swift's Specific is the best and ha given more general satisfaction than any oth er I nave "ever handled. Swift's Specific is an ex cellent tonic, and as an antidote for malaria has no superior. Many ladies are using it as a tonic for general" aeblllty; and find It the most satis .factory one ever used. -I have been dealing In Swift's Specific for five years or more, and am satisfied that I do not place too high an estimate upon Its merits. G. W- DIXON. Prescribed by Physicians. I have prescribed Swift's Specific in many cases of Blood Poison and as a general tonic, and it has made cures after all other remedies had failed, , R. ML. STRICKLAND. M. D., t. -.- i-t- ( Cave Spring, Ga. - Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free . 8WDT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga Jan 20-D&Wly suwefr nrm chw Buffalo Lithia Water FORMAIJLRIAL POISONING. USE OF IT IN A CASS OP YELLOW FEVBR. , Da. Wjl T. Howabd, or Baltocobx, . Professor of Diseases of Women and Children in - v I the University of Maryland. Dr. Howard attests the common adaptation, of this water in "a wide raAae of cases'''' with that oi the far-famed-White Sulphur Springs, In Green brier county, West Virginia, and adds the follow tnr: ' . "Indeed, In a certain class of cases it is npch superior to the latter. I allude to the abiding debility attendant npqn the tardy convalescence from grave acute diseases; and more especially to the Cachexia and Seqwlsi ncident to Malarwvt Fevers, In all their grades and varieties, to cer tain forms of Atonic Ztyspepsia, and aU the M tions Peculiar to Women that are remediable at au by mineral waters. In short, were I called upon w state from what mineral waters J have seen the great est and most unmistakable amount of good accrue tn the largest number of cases in a general way i would unhesitatingly say the Buffalo Springs, w Mecklenburg county, To." . ; - Db. O. P. Massok, o Riohhoitd,.Va., -Late Professor of General Pathology and Physio- - logy In the Medical College of Virginia : "I have observed marked, sanative effects from the Buffalo Water in Malarial Cachexia, Anton Dyspepsia, some of the Peculiar Affections of tnn, Ancemia, Hypochondriasis. Cardiac TAwf tions, c - It has been especially efficacious in Chronic Intermittent Fever, numerous cases of character, which had obstinately withstood thva remedies,, having been restored to perfect in a brief space of time by a sojourn at the Springs. !Db. Jera WwWiwxuisoit Jacksoh, Tew. Extracts from Communication on. the Therapeutic Action of the BvffaXo Lithia Water in the " Tlralnia iftdlcat Monthly" for February. 18TI.- Their great value m Malarial Diseases and Sequela has been most abundantly and satisfac torily tested; and I have no question that it wouia have been a valuable auxiliary In the treatment of the epidemic of Yellow Fever which bo terriMJ afflicted the Mississippi Valley during the pa summer. I prescribed It myself, and it gaj prompt relief In a case of Suppression of Urine, m 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 (haying prescribed it to out a single oase) I, f course, cannot undertake w say. There is no doubt, however, about the fact Us administration was attended by the most beW dal results." u : , Springs now opens for guests. iWater m eases of one dozen half gallon bottuw $5 per case at the Springs. i Springs pamphlet mailed to any address. Jor sale by W. H. Green, where the Sprint pamphlet may be found. - . . - THOS. P. GOODS, Proprietor, ap 10 tf nrm - Buffalo Ltthla Springs., The Lincofii:Press, PUBLISHED EVEBT "PBID AY,' AT LINCOLN- ByJOHN "C TIPTON, Ed'r and Prop'r. - The (PRESS Is acknowled ged, by those who .have tried tt?to be one' of the best Advertta? Mediums In Western North Carolina. It pas lam and steadily lnoreasmg patronage in oolS! Gaston,- Catawba, Cleaveland, Burke and Meoklenburg. counties. - Adyertising rates nw ral. Subscription $1.50 per annum. nmn t fe 1
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 1, 1885, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75