Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / April 26, 1885, edition 1 / Page 2
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; FtJILMKi! ANNOtJNCKMKNT.: ' '' THB scoKNiNa star, thldiwtdanraew; aper In North Carolina, la published dally, except Monday, at $7 00 per yew. $400 tot six month. 1 3 00 for three months, $1.60 lor two months; 75c r Jot one month, to mall gnbaorlberf-DeilTered to tity subscribers at the rate of 15 cents per week or any period from one week to, ae year v. . " -THS WSBKLY STAB to panllshed every Friday - . morning at $1 60 per year. $1 00 for six months 50 , rent for three months . . zjh&c vt ' JUJVKRnSINQ BATES DAILY).--tae sow ' oneday,$100; two days, $1 76! three days, 250J - tonr days, $3 00 : ne days, i 60 ; one week; ttpw two weeks, $8 SO : three weeks $S 60 ; one month, v $10 00; two months, $1700; three months, $24 00J '.$tx months, $40 00; twelve montts, $60 00. Tea -Inesof BW&KoviDatnHwteo AU annoTmoementt of Pairs, Festtrals, Balls ' flops, HoleSooletyMeettogs, JUttoal Keet naA.wiabeeharsregilartertMngr "Kotiaes nnder head of 'City Items' SO dentsber line for first Insertion, and 15 eentsrper line for naoa sntMeqnent Insertion t , i Hjf f f i No advertisements Inserted tn'tocal SoRdnn t any prloe. . - vt Advertisements Inserted onee a weeltto&JI rill be charllOOperBouarefoteaoiiniseruon. Kverv other day, three ioartha of dally rate. SkTwdti.ll rexfajevrtlbem Twioe An r triple-oolumn ' Notloes of Marrlase or- mm .a -.r i TVW mJrfmint-ttMl spent, Sesointlona of Thanka, aakie. rerkarired ' or as ordinary ad rer Useuwnta, but only half rates when paid for strtetly ln-ei vaneei - Ai votiv in-envanoei - ai this rata w oenu win 1 pari ,y for a simple annonneament ox Marrlace or Death. AdTurtlHBmBPtg tn follow readmtr Blatter, or to ooonpy any special plaoe, will be charged extra-1 aooorams: to toe position aearea Advertisements on which do Bpeclfle6r5ipet f is marked wui De oontmnea -tui iot- i bid," at the option of the publisher, and oharged np to um oate ox aisoononnanoe. Advertisements dlsoontmued before the time ' "ontraoted for has expired, oharged transient ates for time aotnally published. . - Adrerttaementa kept nnder the head of "New Advertisements'! will beofaarged fifty per cent. ' " Amusement, Auction and Offiolal advertlsemeats one aouar per square ior eacn msanaon. , All announoementa end reooriiTWwnds ttone of- v o&ndldatee for offloe, whether In the shape of aommnnfoatlons or otherwise, will be oharged at advertisements. . Payments for transient advertisements must be made in advance. Known parties, or stranger ' with proper reference, may pay monthly or raar- terly, aooordincjto oontraot. , , ; . Oontraet advertisers will not be allowed to oeed their spaoe or advertise any thing foreign to ; their regular business without extra charge at transient rates. Bemittaoeee must be made by Check, Draft. Postal Money Order, Sxpress, or to Registered . Letter. . -Only snob, remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. . . . - - otimmmaoaiaana. unleesthev oontam imoor i tant news, or dlsouss briefly andjproperly subject ; of real mterest, are not wanted; ana,u ' able me er way they will Invariably be 9U owe u SpWVI- AAont. iTerr o: elected If the real name of the author Is tne autnoris wiume ield. N Advertisers should always specify the issue or ' mmtm thirr denlre tn advertise m. Where no is sue is named the advertisement win be inserted n the Dally, where an advertiser oontracts ior the paper wbe sent to him during the time hi advertisement is in, the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his ad The Morning Star. : Br WIUIAM H. BERNARD. WILMING TON, N. C. " Satueday EvEsmrS, April 25, 1885. EVENING EDITION, VICIOUS LITERATURE. The pleasures of literature and the value of the press are not easily ex aggerated. If, however, the one r shall abound in exquisito charms, it mast be' .pare, : "refined and elegant; if the' other would " fulfil ita V great mission z& a genuine educator of both mind and, morals,' it must be free- without license, bold without bluster; faithful to right, at all times conscientious,-firm, truthful, eleva f ted and just. Whilst no greater curse can befal a nation than a reck- less,' corrupt, vicious press, bo no greater conservators of morals and freedom can be found- than a vigil ant," vigorous, independent, high toned press, sending forth in every ' direction its millions of pages to teach, to elevate, to bless, "silent as snowflakes, but potent as thunder." Napoleon said, that ''four hostile newspapers were more to be feared . than a thousand bayonets." A free press is indeed the foe to tyrants; a pure press is the friend of morality. If, then, the "fourth estate" would . be i blessing, it must be faithful to God and humanity. If it would up- y hold just laws and good government, it must be . free . from dictation and arbitrary restraint. - Said Junius, -tne liDerty oi tne press is tne pai- ladium of all the civil, political and religious rights. . . . - ; Are the' great papers of this coun- try true to their calling and to the best interests of society when they de scend to the office of the scavenger and fill their immense columns with, the most offensive scandal? Are they " really subserving their great ends when they fish up from the lowest purlieus -and slums all that is filthy andulfc? What right have theyto give themselves up- day after day to the baneful work of poisoning socie ty by supplying in detail all kinds of gossip and defamation and 'lustful orgies," as Milton hath it ? Has the press .no- Bobletrand more usefurwort -"than to gratify the prurient appetite, to satisfy and to excite a taste for the depraved and debauched in literature? Have the leaders of the press any right to thus pervert their great influ ence, rand thus mind? 1 delude the. publie Any one who has ever visited, a w , iewl t peyspaper stall must have 1 ; been struck wHh thelarge and f ul array of illustrated papers of the lowest characterTeaTdhgoutTtheir hideous atorikra mi aian-v. A . - . ; . ' ' ' tO. - - -w - p yum. ; only please a corrupt eye, and :.f eed - Y . the fires of- a lustful natura- A -ooiih-; try man stands appalled, and does not "T ,wonder tiiat there is moral decay and . I' social rottenness' in the land. We t mongnt that ; here was license and mtUberty and that the,pnbUo custodians should suppress them with rong ana sudden ,arm. No one Bhould be allowed to systematically corrupt the mind aorals.'rhe Vendor of 'aTiciouiJlej ie as obnoxious to law i tbe Vendor of any other sort ot poisons.? tOther forms' of Vice and immorality are re strained by-legal zenactientwhy- 9ot-h-formt' oTCharleWinr each SThoe thi days- been liet loose upon the. English- Every one familiar with : literature how utterly abandoned and Ticious were the writers of that age. "Under the Puritan rule that pre- eded nature was put in straight 1 i h0Mff ascel ticism reigned. A war was made 3 A unon all nleasures. wiDiner out all eauty, J5n?feP8 W yertmg all taste, suppressing every form of amusement and recreation to L.:- mnA KaJ It was a hideous mask, a fearful prison-house, a ter- ' . I hble night-mare. All was gloomy, tcrimonious, intolerant. But a change, a great and fearful jchange; came wita: ibaL Bdstoratidzt.tj Taine, in his "Uistory n-ngiisn i Literaturev' says: "Like a checked and flooded stream public opinion dashed with all its natural force and all its acquired momentum into the bed from which it had been debarred; the outburst carried away tbe dam, the violent return drowned moralitv. to the senses In this jgreat reaction devotion and honesty, fe wept away together, left mankind but the wreck and the mire. .There remained but the animal,with- s ( but bridle or guide, urged by his de- kires beyond justice and shame." ) It was then that blackmailing, de bauchery, drunkenness, and, indeed, every form of vice and corruption, held their saturnalia; and such crea tures as Lord Rochester and Count Grammont were the paragons of mo ralitv and virtue. Rochester was both courtier and poet, and his wri tings and those of his associates were as thoroughly impregnated with virus as their lives were abandoned and unrestrained. That was the period when such women as Lady Morland, the Countess of Ossory and the Duchess of Cleveland, women with out shame or character, held high places in the seraglios of the Court. ! Are ve willing to have a return of such an era ? Must our sons and daughters be debauched by a litera ture that is more vicious, if possible, than that of the court of Charles IL? Are papers that teem with the minutest details of crime, vice and scandal, proper visitants to the homes of moral qnd religious people f Must papers be sustained which cater for the lowest appetites, and spread broadcast their social poisons ? These questions are worth considering. We believe thev will be answered in favor of public decency and pri vate morality. The world is .pro gressing in this direction and the press, if it will lead, must raise this banner. On the bells of the horses shall be written "Holiness to the Lord." C HISTORY IN VHB SCHOOLS. some montns ago an editorial in the Stab on the teaching of history was. approved of by some of our I State contemporaries ahd copied. In i mat editorial it was urged upon I teachers that the true, way the pb.il I osophio and : common-sense way of II teaching history is to begin at home and then work abroad and work back - TTTI V into tne past, wny teacn a ooy or girl the history of the seven ancient monarchies and leave him in dense ignorance of. bis own people and State? Why teach a boy the history of Greece and Borne and leave him in the very blackness of darkness as to the history of the ; English people and their descendants in the United States ? There is neither "rhyme nor reason" in such an absurd and un wise procedure. The intelligent parents in North Carolina should see to it that the his tory of the State is taught to their children. In how many of the private schools is this done ? The writer is directing the historical reading of several persons; He put the School I History of ;North Carolina, latest edi tion in their hands.: He next took up I a good jone volume, octavo, history jof tbe United States; He will next take People. "One of the readers is now reading thelfonr- volume history of t ro , innr,. , wwa. wm aww lfe est MAD x. mm wl Aa,;..- I . : . . - , - i I - t - pt iiTBinr,TT m two volume History of North Caroli na, ancLthis is being done. : This Is a very defective' and. unsatisfactory. work but it-Las to be osed in lieu of that teacher? iff North (daroliha Will persist in WnffNohera hii- persist in uBing Ncithern hiiis- tories that fairly teem with misstate- ments and. falsehoods and some, of them hold Jnp the Southern people- as aitors andV rebels 1 W by Soutbern Iparenu allow theif ch dreri;..to batbns Why are children subjected to the : virus of . enemies whohave no par- wVan aw Aiwa '. 11 4tta tmitli An: justice ? What father wishes -his the f acts M history ?" tet the frortk bold up -the .'fiouthera ; patriots . as j rebels and traitors if 5 they please bo so, but . Southern ' parents should see to it mat ineir cnuureu are hu compelled to i study books in which crhifinMlon; f and misrepresentation ind down right lying abound, . . TIL nn1,,mA The one volume, Octavo, history of ihe United States that we have put into the hands of a yount? man is W 4 Alexander Stephens's larger-history. it is the ablest, most .truthful and most philosophical of all of the one volume histories. If the student . . : ;i wishes to pursue the, matter farther he should read Bancroft's n masterly work new , edition, (six or eight volumes; anacisiasters wors upen ino. pian or ween. , wo. .vQtumeH i will be accessible and more to follow. The Federal history in opposition to Bancroft in Hildreth's. There is now and then Some "gush". . w . a V . .. I in tne JNortnern papers aDoui uie election of Cleveland working such tremendous results in the South among tne negroes ana among par ties. This - is all in "tne eye" or in the imagination. Thus far there are no sisrns or indications of the so- called "revolution" either among ne groes or whites. The negroes are ready to answer the old horn-blowing upon occasion, rne xtepnmican party i is no weaker now than it was in No- r e .1 vember. The Democrats are "watch ing and waiting." So the talk of wonderful changes is all gammon. There is nothing in it. There is a reform that has been in stituted by Secretary Endicott that is worth mentioning and imitating. It appears that the employes of the Government have been in the habit nnder Republican rule and waste to run up accounts and never pay them. The Secretary has issued an order to his clerks that they must pay or lose their places. This is altogether proper. The greatest curse that can fall upon a family or upon a sober man is to involve him in the meshes of debt. It reduces him to a verita ble condition of slavery and makes him poor indeed." Virginia will endeavor to get a re hearing in the Coupon cases. It will endeavor to obtain a reversal of an opinion and will make the fight upon the One point that a suit brought against the officers of a State is in fact a suit brought against the State itself. It is against the Constitution to sue a State. Attorney General Garland and Mr. W. T. Merrick, the eminent Washington lawyer, will ar gue the case for Virginia. The small army of the United States at Panama seems to have done gpod in preventing a fight as well as in regulating the town. Promptness in action often wins the day when excessive caution wakes up to find that the critical hour has passed. "Too late", is written upon the ban ners of armies as it is so often upon the frontlets of men. HOOLITTLE AGAIN. N. Y. Times, Rep. TTl n m. . T T V v . . m jjiX-oenator ames rt. uoonuie is in Washington and wants the Aus trian Mision. It is now just 21 years since Mr. Doolittle procured for I Thomas J.Conatty, an ex-clerk of tne Treasury Department, a permit to engage in the cotton trade in the southern btates, a business ; in which very large fortunes were made at that time. - When the permit had been obtained Senator Doolittle said to Conatty, "You have a good thing and will make a pile of money, and can afford to ba little o-aniron. can arrora to De a little generous. x ou know I am a poor man and have not made any money since I have been in public life. I think you can afford to let me share in the proceeds and be none the poorer. thrift noA The a. draft , of a W to hims&f to be copied by Mr. Conatty, in which the latter was -made to appear as making the offer of one-fourth the profits of his ventures in cotton as the free gift of a generous . and grateful heart, and Mr. Doolittle at the same time handed him a reply to this very curious letter, in which he thankfully accepted Uonatty's "most magnani mous offer. , yvf terward Mr. Doo- v . v m ' Mtt'' w ' m-. mueTOtewj.wen jamtnen in 1 . J X" il Tl l a. m f I commauu tne xepanment oi tne Gulf, asking, him to aid Mr. Conatty in nis operauons. , . - - "ijpaMj TMMm 1 li T . Tne Ienoeratle Situation: - : New Yort World, Demr - t We ", respect tbe Independents. They pOTformed'good service ih'the Pre8identlai:';election.;Their4! fierce crusade against Blaine.tiid' much to encourage honest r Bepablicans to break the thraldom of party, : , Their support of Cleveland was sincere. It doubtless cost the candidate .many Democratic. vote$. But that , was not "their fault It was aatural sequence iiaaslv manif estad ftfrainst"old.lin they do not yet appear to have re nounced, -i-"-'----' :'",:.? ' It-wottld -be-gratifying if-all -ot -niad3 acceptable to the Independents. jdo aii: cieariy impossiuie u Independents expect theFfcisidentto conform to their own ' rjecnliar no- Ji!Lt Q ?tSenSwn ions instead of be"ino- satisfied to aid tiim in making a strong, honest Dem ocratic Administration. ... President Cleveland was elected by nearly 5,000,000 Democratic voes, as the candidate ; of tbe,i)emqcratic' ?arty on a Democratic pla tform, 'hat platform declared first and fore most that while 'new issues are Dorn of time and progress, and old :issuesT perish, the JJemocraticfarty remains and wiU ever remain as the bestand only security for the continuance of.. free government. - . rresident Ule.veland is as sacreaiy bound to remain true to. the Demo cratic , party as to adhere to the re- : j t Pieup. ? w fore the election. CURRENT COMMENT. ihfe v phnanthroist in Jbrownstone dwellings and the swarms of. igno rance and vileness a few blocks away.V He was consumed with con-H cern for the laughing, jolly slave of the cotton belt. Billions of money and a million of lives were expended to push the equatorial African in the gouth, fat and full of dance, the hap- pieat laborer in the wide world, into the contest for bread, where thou sands are gaunt with hunger and . fe rocious from - despair. No peasant population ever had such religious advantages as the plantation blacK. The per cent, of Church membership was large, tie was the most con tented of laborers. He ate to his fill. He shouted at big meetings. w m m m ins private paicn ot cotton aoout "the quarters" made him rich indeed. .rut over against uiese merry nanus in the Southern fields the pinched, sullen, vicious and debauched thou sands who cram the fetid and dismal dens of our large cities. Richmond Advocate. The Courier-Journal, anent Grant's hallucinations about his old war memories, recalls tne last woras of Napoleon, "Head of the army!" and how Lee and Jackson died issu ing commands to that noble spirit A. if. llill, who fell m battle in 1865. The South had no more devoted sol dier than A. P. Hill and no more heroic martyr. He .deserves to go sounding down the ages, consecrated by the lips of Lee and Jackson, when at the nates of glory. Augusta Chronicle. Mr. Phelpa aen Lawyer. Burlington (Vt) Free Press. Mr. Phelps has uniformly main tained, in public addresses and in private conversation, that the admin istration of justice, and not its per version, is the duty of a true lawyer; and it is no more the part of an hon est lawyer than of any other honest man to defend a mean cause or a dis reputable client, to vindicate any fraud or defeat any right; and those who know anything about his prac tice knew that this has been some thing more than a theory with him. It is well known in Vermont that Mr. Phelps's services have not been pro curable by anybody and everybody who had money to pay for" them. He has refused retainers not a few because not satisfied that the side he was asked to defend was the right side. He would consent that his connection with the Emma mine suits should be defended only on the ground that the sale of that mine was an honest and square transaction a sale made upon the report of ex perts sent from England by the pur chasers, of a mine wjjich repaid a quarter of the purchase money in dividends the first year after the sale, by a client who believed in the mine, made larger investments in it after its sale to the English company, and C7 A ef V M t 1 1 . M V was connaent prooaoiy to nis aymg i some weakness, especially ior union fa day that with skilful management cmc, which sold down to 48, a decline of and proper exploitation, it could yet' be mad a valuable property. miss Sevier's Seclusion. Philadelphia Press, Within two miles of Kingston, Tenn., resides Miss Mary Sevier, who for sixteen years has been a recluse. In 1869 the temperance question -was fiercely agitated in that vicinity, and feeling ran very high between thei liq.".;.Diere8ranri le. f11 ,W',B' -??d editor of the local weekly,- liquor- interest and the friends of was the the East Tennesseean, &n& he persuaded her to contribute an article attacking the saloon keepers.: The latter were so incensed that they - frightened Beid into giving up the name of -the an thor of the article, and Miss Sevier 11 ip. lms so mortmed ner tnat sue re tired to her beautiful home on the outskirts of tbe town. She has very rarely left it, and no one but mem bers of the family see her. From a bright and .blooming, girl she , ,has grown into a prematurely : aged and soured recluse. The " family enter tains most liberally, but she has ' her own apartments, into which guests never- penetrate ... Her father was Gov. Sevier j one of the early execu tives of Tennessee, (r v -Stranger tnan Fiction are the records of some of the cures of con sumption effected by that most ' wonderful remedy lr. fierce' "Golden- Medical Discovery. ThousandAof grateful men and women, who f have -been snatched al most from the very jaws of death, can tes tify that consumption, - in its- early stages, is bo longer incurable. ? The Discovery ifts no equal- as a pectoral and alterative,' and ; tne most oosunate anecuons or - the throat and lungs yield to Its power. All drug gists. f THE LATEST NEWS FEOMiXnpAiiTSor the wobid; He Pase nlet-Wlslit-CoiuUiloit Somewbat Improved-confident. Ex pectation that he will Survive the f 'iBr Telegraph to tiie Xoralne tar. i1 NkwToxk, Apru 25. Geo. Grant did not get settled fo? thes night , till about 1 o'clock this Tnorning. He then received five minims of morphine, and after that hour slept JifttervalB. The sore at the base of his tongue appeared angry last night, and the restlessness may have been the resultr Between 6 and 8 o'clock this morning the patient slept most of the time, and when he aroused, and: bis throat i was examined, there were more favorable iqdi-r cations than yesterday. When Dr. Doug lass left at 8.30 a. ;m, he said that the Gen eral had passed a very quiet night, though his sleep was somewhat broken. L Bo far as the physical condition- of. Gen. . Grant is Concerned, he' might with 6a,fety be re moved to the mountains or the -seaside to morrow, but no exodus will occur until July 1st. That the General will survive the summer vis the "belief of those in a po sition to judge of the probabilities. He will, it is thought, pass the summer -without a relapse, but the recurrence of cold weather Will perhaps effect a chance that is not de iiraDie to anucipa sirable to anticipate at this time of im- proved conditions. i FOREIGN. prltlsl Cabinet Council In . Session A Lsirse Force of Turkoman Rlllltla' to be Raised ' by Gen. KontaroflT 5 France and. E;yptr. . . j (By Cable to the Horning Star.l Lostdon, April 85. A Cabinet council is' now sitting. ' A dispatch from St. Petersburg, received lere this afternoon, states that the Czar has ssued an imperial ukase sanctioning the aising of a large force of Turkoman mUi ia by Gen, Eomaroff. ; CAtno, April 25. The French diplomatic agent is here yet; he says that he will leave Cairo at 6 o'clock this evening. It is be lieved here that France has not yet in structed the agent to leave Egypt. It is thought that France will accept Egypt's offer to compromise, made yesterday. In this the Khedive's government proposed to kpologize for the forcible entry into the office of the Bosphore Egyptien and to ad mit 'that the rights of domicile of the publishers have been violated, provided France would permit the form of apology to go on record without any ref erence to the seizure of the Bosphore Egyp tian. THE ISTHMUS. Every thins Quiet .at Panama Coor tesleaol Teiegrapn Lines. (By Telegraph to the Morning Star.l Panama., via Galveston, April 25. Everything is quiet here. Lieut T. B. M. Mason is in charge of the Panama Railway. The Superintendent of the Cable Company has just received the following from the New York office: "Inform all United States military and naval officers that the Central and South American Telegraph Company, on Sunday, (April 26, will .transmit from Panama their family and social messages to places in the United btatcs, free'ot charge, nope you will arrat ire with the Panama Railway to extend the free use of its wire for this pur I Ipose, in behalf of the United States officers at uoioo. rne uaiveston manager nas been instructed to accept replies free." HON. A. M. KEILEY. Reported Reelsnatlon of tne Italian Mlaelon. I By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Washington, April 25. The Republican prints a special from Richmond, saying that Mr. Eeiley left there last night for Washington, and when he reaches here will resign his position as Minister to Italy, and be appointed Minister to Russia, in place of Gen. Lawton. The report, how ever, cannot as yet be verified. VIRGINIA. A Village Nearly Destroyed by Fire. I By Telegraph to the Morning Star.l Lynchburg, April 25. Grundy, the county seat of Buchanan county, on the ex treme western limit of this State, has been burned. The court house, with the county records, and nearly the entire village, were destroyed. FINANCIAL,. New York . Stock itlarket JDull and Weak. By Teiegrapn to the Morning Star. J New York. Wall Street. April 25. 11 A.M The stock market continues very dull; the fluctuations are unimportant The open ing prices tnla moraine were in many cases a shade lower than the closing quotations last evening,: irom wnicn there was a alien t rally, but the changes were for oniy small Tractions in prices of all active stocks, Nearly all stocks are loaned flat, and in no case is more that 1-128 of one per cent I U V1AVJ moi UVU& VUV AUCftAAGII UWdttCU I H . T.atn IVk (ha flvof riAll tVia VnavVef A nmnl M-s,-rs.A i per cent Northern Pacific preferred and uregon Transcontinental are also heavy. At 11 o'clock tbe market is dull and weak. The sales for the first hour were 30,000 snares, COTTON. A Summary of tne Crop to Date. " iBy Telegraph to the Morning Star. New York, April 25. Receipts of cot ton for all interior towns, 8,076 bales; re ceipts from plantations, 8,282 bales; to tal visible supply of cotton for the -world, 2,517,606 bales, ' of which 1,950,506 bales are American, against a,Bl,V03 and 2,004, m fe i . . vra oaies respectively last year; crop in sight 5.506,890 bales. FERSONAL. ; Mrs. Langtry has now mort RS New York real estate costing her Johann Strauss has had the freedom of the city of Vienna extended to uun, wun exemption from the income tax. ' Capt. Phelan, the Kansas City xruumaa woo was staDoea oy snort, has consented' to come on to New York and tesuiy against the latter v a It was: Secretary McCrary who said.that in looking over- the record of the west .Foint fcadet8 . he found that cadet uiysses Simpson Grant nad a very narrow chance for remaining at the Academv. v VT.y,Li?ai(hAIr- McCrary, "you would hardly believe it, but there was a time in his cadet career when had he once more failed to polish his shoes his number of demerits would hava expelled him from the tvcaueiny vxncwnaU Commercial Qa A Caed. To all who are suffering from errora and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness early decay, loss of manhood, E9l 8end a. recipe that will cure you Tbkk of Chaeqb.' ' This great remedy was fevered by a missionary in 8outh Amer- seii-auaresaeu envelope to Rxv. Joseph T. Inkak. Station D. Neva York. CO M MB RC I A J M ARK KT ' f .STAR OFFICE. April 25, 4 P. M. SPIRITS TURPENTINE The market wasquotetrsteady at'29 cents per gallon, with sales reported of 50 casks at that ., ': ROSIN--The market y was quoted quiet, atv 90c for Strained and 92ic for Good Strained, with no sales reported. TAR The market was quoted firm at $1 10 per bbl; of 280 lbs, with sales at quo tations. - . CRUDE TURPENTINE-Market steady, with sales reported at $1 10 for Hard and f 1 55 for Virgin and Yellow Dip. COTTON The market ; was; quoted quiet, with small sales reported on a basis of lOf cents per ft for Middling. The following were the official quotations, i Ordinary ......... -- cents lh- Good Ordinary........ 9f : Low Middling. . ...... ;10 1-16 " Middung. ............ .10f Good Middline. .... .'. .10 9-16 " PEANUTS Market quiet and steady, with sales reported at 4550 cents for Extra Prime, 5560 cents for Fancy, and 7075 cents for Extra Fancy. RICE. Market steady and unchanged. We quote: Rough:. Upland $1 00 10; Tidewater V 15i' SO. Clkati: Common 4T4i cents; Fair 4f5 cents; Good' 55 Nentsi; Prime 5J6 fcents; Choice 6J6i cents per 'ft. TIMBER-Market steady. Prime and Ez ra Shipping; first class heart, $90010 00 jer M. feet; Extra Mill, good heart, $6 50 S 00; Mill Prime, $6 006 i50; Good Common Mill, 4 005 00; Inferior to Or dinary, $3 0O4 00. RECEIFTM.: Cotton.. 22 bales Spirits Turpentine . 83 casks Kosin 407 bbls Tar........ 162 bbls Crude Turpentine 26 bbls D O WI ES CTI Alt RETS ! By TeleKTAPh to the Morning Star. . Financial. . Nkw York, . April 25, Noon. Money eaav at 1 ner cent. Sterlincr exchange 486 and 488. State ; bonds neglected. Govern ments dull but steady. Commercial. . . . Cotton quiet, with sates to-day 'of 5 bales ; middling uplands 10 13-1 6c; middling- Or leans 11 l-loc. Futures weak, with sales to day at the following quotations: April 10. 7Uc : May 1 u. 70c ; j une 10. uc ;j uly 10 9c ; August 10.96c; September 10.70c. Flour quiet and unchanged. Wheat higher. Corn better, .fork steady at fig uu. Lrfurd firm at $7 17T. Spirits turpentine firm at 33J S3ic Kosin firm at $1051 08. Freights firm. ; Baxttmokb, April 25. Flour firm with a hardening tendency; Howard street and western super $3 255 62; extra $3 87 4 25; family $ 4 255 25; city mills super $3 253 50; extra $3 754 00; Rio brands $5 00. Wheat southern firm and quiet; western higher and firm, closing quiet; southern red $1 04ai 06: do amber SI 08 19; No.l Maryland $1 06il 07; No. 2 western winter red on spot 9999ia Corn southern easier and quiet; western higher, closing dull; southern white 58 59c; do yellow 5456c. FOHEIGN IOABEBT8. LBy Cable to the Xornln .Star.l LivBKPOOii, April 25, Noon. Cotton steady, with little doing; middling uplands 5d; middling Orleans 5 1516d; sales to day of 7.000 bales, of which 1,000 were for speculation and export; receipts 4,000 bales, of which 3,600 were American. Fu tures dull. Uplands, 1 m c, May and June delivery 5 54-645 53-64d; June and July delivery 5 58-64d ; July and August deliv ery 5 62-64d; August and September de livery 6 2-646 l-64d; September and Oc tober delivery 5 62-64d. 1 P. M. Uplands, 1 m c, April delivery 5 52-64d. buyers' option; April and May de livery 5 52-64d, buyers' option: June and July delivery 5 57-64d, value; July and August delivery 5 61-64d, buyers' option; August and September delivery 6 l-64d, sellers' option; September and October de livery 5 61-64d, value; October and No vember delivery;5 53-64d, sellers' option; November and December delivery 5 50-64d, sellers' option. Futures closed weak. Bales of cotton to-day include 5, 800 bales American. . - Do iron Bear Tills, Mr. Cleveland? New York Times, Mugwump Organ. The President made two very bad appointments on Tuesday. Charles H. Chase, who was named for Col lector of Internal Revenue at Port land, and Eben F. Pillsbury, chosen for the same office in Boston, are un scrupulous Democratic politicians, and they have a bad record of dis loyalty in sentiment during the .war. Their appointments ought to be revoked and at once, as the selec tion of such men for important offices is so wide and conspicuous a depart? ure from the general policy of the administration that it can be ex plained only on the ground of a lack of familiarity with the character of the appointes. A Shirt Tale. Texas Sittings. . "Little boy, do you understand what is meant by energy and enter prise ?" "No, pa, I don't think I do." "Well, I will tell you; that one of the richest men came here without a shirt to his back, and now he has got millions." . "Millions! how many does he put on at a time ?" "Acted Like a Charm." This is what Mrs: - Mayer, of Baronne street, New Orleans, says of Brown's Iron Bitters. A "charm" works quietly, surely, promptly, thoroughly and with delightful effect . That is lust the way this wonder ful family medicine works on invalids Who have been suffering the woes of liver com plaint, dyspepsia and impoverished blood. Those who know its worth say it is & com plete cure for dyspepsia, weakness.malaria, neuralgia, etc. , , f CARLTON HOUSE, iirOTj:DnK QHXINE OFiWILMINGTOS AHD WXLDOS BaOroad, 65 miles from WllmtiisrtfflL - -. V hi : Table always -wen -supplied with the best the country affords. "Bates of Board very reasona ble , ' I.CABLTON,; ' deo 31 D&Wtf Proprietor. II . rum mm. rL A Remarkable Care of a nG : Coh'James L. Fleming, a Dron-ir- . merchant, a member 01 thePfiS? "oce Lofton, Augnsta. Ga.. makes the f0X5emillf 4 , In the fall 61 1883 I had a vainw wHh a severe case of pinkeye whiLe Colt taken the most fearful case of blood pffin h ever seen. After eight or nine innmnin I ha5 togwlthevery remedy that iTou W h dc despaired of a enre. At this time thP ar of. I ?.Te.hecause of swollen naa oyer rc jorty running gores. He h7y 4 number of large sores on his hod v a S. Hel 1 hody ft uuiub. xio wm a most Pltiabln lnt- u tUer and I was advised to end hb : raffiS? shot-gun,. He was a valuable t inofgan ue was a valuable animal alVh not want to lose him. After rari-wand id in search for anotW "5.Un? my br i thought of Swift's Specific. I knew it I nableto the human family as fa mJ 18 a! and why should It not be for the H pnrier I did not hesitate, but sent las! for a supply. y w Atlanta I befran the treatment with 4 oz of s c 4 oz. of water three times a day 1 hi t aai uedforaweek. Then I increased tlm comili pz. of each, and continued for a VppI to Increased to 8 oz. and run it a week wfc t en 1 back to 1 oz. again. The result was tw end of the first week the horse had I & at tite, which he had not had since hk sUnl? the end of the . second week even provement was apparent, for many of thi . were healing nicely, and the hoise manifL68 desire to move about. At the end Tf JL st a Week he began to show gain in ah .i?4 full appetite. The swelling had ' Md peared. Iraedln aU about 15 bottfe80f Rdp Ipeciflcand when I quit its use the 8 onlv four small sores left on hta and twT np Immediately . "un.ana tney healed . In August last all symptoms of the di, passed away, and up to date no signs of teasa turn of the trouble have made tbe ? annL1.00 n j I regard it one of the most remarkahi? have ever known. Thus the great mid cin? 1 . KSce!0011 10 th8 ammal ES Augusta, Jan. 9, 1885. Jas."L. Plexkc MaUedfereB0Ok n B1d and Ssin Dica. j THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO lan20-D&Wly fr POLLS 25 YEARS IN USE. The Greatest Medical Triumph of ths Age! SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Lou of appetite. Bowels costive, Pain in the head with a dull sensation in the teekrt. Fain under the shonlder. blade FuHneas after eating, with adis laellnatlen to exertion of body or mind, Irritability ef temper, Low spirits, with a feelincf Baviae neglected some doty, WeariaesSiIHaadneBs, fluttering at tin Heart Dotal before the eye,Headaci ever tao rigbt'eya Restlessness, vjti atfai dreams Highly colored truism - CONSTIPATION. XL XT' ILLS are especially adipW to cadi eaees, one .dose effects snch n change olfeeltng as to astonish the smTerer. They Increase the Appetite , and cawe to body co Thoi iriestojthus the eystem ii narUbiedaB4- by their Tonic Action on the lteestlveOnsaiItegttlar Stools m pTOdoeedPrtoe-a5c. 44 Wnrray St.,S,T. TUTT'S EXTRACT S4RSJP11H Benovatea the bodyr jnakes healthy flesh, strengthens the weak, repairs the wastes of the Bystem. witii pure blood and hard muscle; . tones the nervous system, invigorates the brain, and imparts the vigor of manhood. OFFICE 44 Murray St., New York Jan 30 DAW ly BU.we fr Jan 30 rr on nooipc i vi mm- s ra f n s ez : THE GOVERNMENT ENDORSES The American Agriculturist TROTH THS TENTH CEHBTT8, VOL. 8, JUST ITELEIIID. The American Agriculturist is especially worthy of mention, because of the remarkable success that has attended the unique and untirine efforts of its proprietors to increase and extend its cir culation. Its contents are duplicated every month for a German edition, which also circu lates widely." This Tribute is a pleasing incident in the mar vellous nearly HALF A CENTURY . Career of this recognized leading Agricultural Journal of the world. What it is To-Day. Six months ajro the American AgrMviM tereduponaNBW CAREER OF PBOSPEftm, and to-day it is far superior to any similar peri odical ever produced in this or any other coun try. .Richer in editorialstrength;richer in engra vings; printed on finer paper, and presenting in every Issue 100 columns of original readme mi ter from the ablest writers, and nearly Wo illus trations. Dr. George Thurber, for nearly qua ter of a century the editor-in-chief of tta J icon Agriculturist, Joseph Harris, Byron D. wa sted, CoL M. C. Weld, and Andrew S. -Fuller, . to other long time Editors, together with the otner writers who have made the nSm rist what It is to-day, ARE STILL AT THBia POSTS., WHAT, FREE ? ? ? Every subscriber, whose subscription is IMME DIATELY forwarded us with the price, $tiw year, and 15 cents extra for postage on Wops-aia-Wlns $1.65 in all-will receive ( the Mm nn Agriculturist English ioi ' German for an oi 1885, and be presented with the AMERICA au RICULTDRIST FAMttY CYCLOPDU , j out), 700 PAGES AND OVKH 1000 MBKAv ING8. Strongly bound in cloth, black ; and Igj; This entirely new volume toaremartabtortg; house and book of reference for nw S ment of human knowledge, including an ak cultural Supplement by Dr. Thurber SEND THREE 2-CENT STAMPS FOB YOU SPECIMEN COPY AMERICAN AGWCU. TURIST, AN ELEGANT FORTY-PAGB Fa" UM LIST, WITH 200 ILLUSTRATIONS, A SPECIMEN PAGES OF OUR FAMUJ CYt PJSDIA. Casyassebs wanted Evketwiie" PUBALISaEBS AMERICAN AGRICULTUKST, David W. Judd, Pres't. Sam'l Bubuhas, 6e& 751 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Jan7tf Vegetable and Fruit CRATES, Iff SHOOKS & READT S -VUK CRATES ARE MADE WITH IPl SLATS and PINE ENDS, giving strength11 lightness and preventing splitting. Avoid delay in shipment, and get first pnceS by making contracts ahead. watt' tPABsWiwgt 300 Tons GERMAN EAINIT FOR SALE AT REDUCED PRICES. WORTH WOBf ap 13 tt Bound to Come. rpHE TIME FOR REFRIGERATORS, P fl Ice CreamFreezers.wmsoon you haven't tnpplied TOTMee give you tne wna "-ts stiil hoiai" cf.l lr.A nnrnlina Cook Stpves swu (V)., apl9tf . .
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 26, 1885, edition 1
2
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