Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / July 22, 1885, edition 1 / Page 2
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J-VW iv-JGK'S ANNOUNCEMENT. TiIS MOic iiNG STAB, the oldest dally new; spar In North Collna fa published daUy, except oad-iy, at $7 00 per year, S4 00 for six months, f oo for three months, $1.50 for two months; 750. r one month, to mall subscribers. Delivered to st subscribers at the rate of 15 cents per week Any period from one week to one year. TUB W2BKLY STAB Is published every Friday iorafas? at $1 60 per year, $1 00 for six months 50 mi tor throe months. ' ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One square e day, $1 00 ; two days, $1 75 ; three days, $2 50 J ur days, $3 00 ; five days, $3 50 ; one week, $4 00, wo weeks, $6 50 : three weeks $3 50; one montn, : ,10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $24 00 ; lx months, $40 00; twelve months, $60 00. Ten n as of solid Nonpareil type make one square. ! nnnnnnunMana nf JMrtL VeetivalA, BallS '1 .'lops, Pic-Nics, Society Meetings, Political Meet iga, &o., will be charged regular advertising rates Notices under head of "City Items" SO cents pet trie iur uia. uirorbusu, auu wnw - - -..ich subsequent Insertion. , ' No advertisements Inserted In Local Column at ray price. ,:j i -.j. - Advertisements Inserted once a week In Dally will be charged $1 GO per square for each Insertion, ivery other day, three fourths of dally rate. Twice a week, two thirds of dally rate. An extra oharge will be made for double-ooluma ; r.r trlple-oolumn advertisements. . t - t. Notices of Marriage or Death, Tribute jof Re-" pect, Resolutions of Thanks, &o., are charged tor as ordinary advertisements, but only half rates when paid for strictly in advance. At this rate 0 cents will pay for a simple announcement or Marriage or Death. i Advertisements to follow reading mattek or to -Hjcupy any special place, will be charged extra according to the position desired t Advertisements on whloh no specified number f Insertions Is narked will be continued till for "Id," at the option of the publisher, and charged up to the date of discontinuance. J ! Advertisements discontinued before the tin contracted for has expired, charged , transient ate for time actually published. j Artvrtistmmtg kent mid or the head- of! "New Advertisements" wUl be charged ftfty per cent. xtra. i 1 Amusement, Auction and OtBolal advertisements '.ne dollar per square tor eacn insertion. All announcements and recommendations of sandidatea for office, whether In the shape of jommunleatlons or otherwise, will be, charged at . advertisements. - -. i Payments for transient advertisements must be oaada in advance. Known parties, or Btranger with proper reference, may pay monthly or quar- :arv ajwrAinir tf nontr&nt. ' nnntrant fuiTArtlnArs will not be allowed tO 6X' red their space or advertise any thing foreign to ihelr regular business without extra charge at ransiaat races. Remlltanoes must be made by Check, .Draft. Portal Money Order, Express, or In Registered fitter. Only such remfttanoes will be at the t tax of the publisher. j Communications, unless they contain tanpor tT!t. mews, or discuss brierflvand nroDerlysubjeots of real interest, are not wanted : and. If aceept- Ma in overr other war. thev will lnvarlabn DS t elected if the real name of the autnor is wimneia. Advertisers should always specify the lssne or ssaes they desire to advertise in. Where !no to ana ia named the advertisement will be Inserted n the Dally. Where an advertiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him dnrinir the tine his Tdvertlaement Is in, the proprietor will oily be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his ad- iress. J ' The Morning Star By WILLIAM Bl. BERNARD, , WIZMIHTG TONl 7. Tuesday Evening, July 21, IS85, EVfENING EDITION. EDUCATIONAL AND "MATERIAL PROGRESS IN THE SOUTH j The Star has been careful to ieep its readers posted as to the educa tional progress' in--t$e Soijthanll es pecially in North Carolina. jThe Star has insisted that the people of, the Southern States had done better for education than had been done un der the same environments and gtu- - pendous difficulties" and within Hhe same period of time in the history of civilization, lhe &tab has said that the Southern people, had so borne themselves under defeat, and had so risen to the highest demands ' put upon them that they had eclipsed the world, and had shown them selves as great and stoical jun der defeat as they had - been betoic . and 6elf-sacrificing in war. Time . but confirms all that has been claimed for our people. Out-of di aster has come progress; out of deso lation has come prosperity. Tbe fair fields of our Southland now re . spond most generously to the toil of - the husbandman, whilst the indus tries are multiplying, and education, so essential to an enlightened and pro- gai re people, is steadily ad vancing. ; This sort of picture is not of he fancy. It is real it is what is. and what is seen by eyes not so friendly as our own. Northern men of fairness and observation have gone back to their homes astonished at the wondrous recuperative enefgy and pluck of the .Souther .jeoble. - " It is only a' gimblet-hdler phrfbsopher of the Townsehd ("Gath") propor tions that can find nothing recupera tive in the South. In six months! of the current year the amount of money invested in : manufacturing in he Southern States exceeds $36,000,opo, and this too when the whole country is stagnant and a trade paralysis! is resting upon the entire North. The most encouraging sign in this great progress in manufactures is the multiplication of theVmlsK industries. Said Col. Pardee, of New Haveta ,in hii arfdrpna in tha Wilminnfinima - ... w-y ( wmw - auutugbuuioua who heard him: "It is the numercius small industries, and not a few great ones, that have made New Englapd prosper as she isv Connecticut owes her present prosperity3 to thV mtiUi- 7 plication of the small industries." The industrial growth in the South is mainly owing to the same caue.' In the entire $36,000,000 invested during the last" six months there is probably 'not ialdolfkU invested in cotton mills. This is-owing t the extraordinary . depression in the prices of cotton goods. The increase of industries is the sure way to pros- ' perity in the end. : . J . In the report pubiiehed in the Bal Mcmufacturer8MecordtheTe& aLlonS liB of !hew enterprises, whiih ; , shows that the South at last ismoving in the right direction. The following I - : - i , v,aAn cat ofnnt from ihelsVof January to tlie 30th of Jnnp 1885: furnace 'companies to make pie iron, foundries and machine shnnV Htcel works.,: cotton seea ou mills notion comiiresses. fruit can- 1 ning factories, carriage, and wagon factories, agricultural implement f ac- tones, flour 'mills, gnsc mius, saw mills. ' planing mills sash, door and blind factories, shuttle factories, to bacco factories, brick yards, ice fac tories. : fertilizer factories, furniture factories, stove lounanes, wire ience factories, tanneries, glass works, gas SS, whiting powpnes, insruio suu H.f B companies, ana companies w miu coal, iron ore, gold, silver, mica, nat ural gas,: oil, etc., and many others. The working of coal, iron, igold, silver, copper, tin, and other mines, is becoming very important. In. IS orth Carolina coal,iron, gold, silver,: cop per, lead, zinc, mica, and other .min erals are worked. The coalfields are very extensive-and gold is found in a great many counwes. 4ueu muo ac such useful minerals as chromic iron, corundum, maganese, kaolin, whet stone, millstone, graphite, limestone, marble, tale, asbestos, soapatone, buildingstone, fcc. Gold mining is nrosecuted more or less in isome r . . twenty-five or thirty counties. But we did not purpose tojtake this wide survey when we took "pen cil in hand. ' We ' meant to jcopy from an amiable and cultivated New England man who has spent several years in travel,, in tne csoutn 4ectur- - -i n i i . i. i ?n as hp wpnt on pdncation. We I fc i refer to Rev. Dr. Mayo, of Boston, -wtom we . have met and , for whose 'character ' we have tbe highest re spect. We have taken occasion to oomment with disapprobation fipon his views relative to the dangejrous Blair Pedagogy bill, and the best answer to ni aavocaay is the cheerful and encouraging report he makes in the following atatenent. , ! i I rrrtr. Kio in t nofnn th nnn. 1 V.. ; . tt J lTl-UUlH.BtUU1,U. 1AC "ejJUlk- ed thus: , . ' I " Within twenty years the Southern pec- behave acne mote, considering- theiri cir :l cumstancesr lor eaucauon tnan wavever i Anno. Yutnra Vw anv rwvmlp ThfV hW K- 1 done before by anyjaepple. They haw re- established their i olO. academies, col leges, and professional schools for whites, the whole upon a broader foundation Had for. xnerly.. ; And in every State the public free school, for all classes and both races has teea established, and today offers from three to . six months yearly instruction to every child. Although some 1 fif ty millions -of dollars have been i do nated to this work, chiefly for the colored people, by the North and the' na tion, yet within this period the South it self, out of its poverty, and amid such trials as cannot even be understood by, tbe stranger, has given more than a hundred millions of dollars as a plant for the child ren; and this year will expend fifteen mil lions on the common school. Scores of little Southern cities tat their people from one to two mills on the dollar more than Boston for public schools. Indeed, ilia sissippi, one of the poorest States, to day gives to each pupil as much as Massachu setts in tne days of Horace Mann. THE HEAT AND HEALTH OF WIL MINGTON. While the North was sweltering at aenng n. Monday, from 95 to 101 degrees on the people of Wilmmgtoon took it cooiiy, ho 10 speK, in tne suaue ai about 88 degrees. 91 is the highest i- ''Ju t.i- ol tu tu.r uouac.er uaS ueu opm- mer in the &tab othce. In theupper towns of the State where they have pUaaant nights and moraines the mercurv has run no a8 hirh a- fU, oc I j-"- i v. 1, i 98 to 101 accordmg-to locality this f . season. July the , was, put y aegreea. weneatrrf rtojn McMaster that When ' the Confedira t-fr ov t.. A C a Z auTu" al ju iuu npuiaui' eyes oru Florida, then owned espain, it was described as a most delightful' climate, where ' tj&oble viuuiu ii t u auu uiu w 1 luu u -eyer seeing a snow, and ,- where : the thermometer rarely showed a greater heat than 109 degrees. Wilmington : , i : i i . : is i army visueu Dy a snow. A per- son may livo here for ten years and never see the ground covered. ,A.8 to the heat the mercury not oncejin ten years ever gets above 98 degrees, and when it got to 101 degrees some few years ago it was so phenomenal as to be known now in the city ; as "the hot Saturday." That day the heat wasashigh as 100 degrees in some of the upper towns of the State. The temoeratnrfi dnmnW tV,n fcAti. .f. - T ; r. ..ugc auuve o, auu when it gets to 90 it ia considered "very hot." The average heat for July and Au gust, we suppose, is not above 8$' de grees. m The delightful breezes ' we have from the Sea when it is clear weather make even hot days compar atively comfortable. The health 6f Wilmington l from year to year will compare with the j upland towns. The death rate fpr the last six years, leaving out 188 which was exceptionally sickly, will compare with any city or town on the entire Atlantic coast. There is no town or city between New Jersey and Florida that can show as good a hui nf health as W ummerion can show. The death rate of ith&fhUes: for the last six years, omitting l will not exceed 14 rri tbevi,uuut -anu we are macn incnnea,iouo Fu. that it will not exceed 12. AN ABSURD ALLIANCE. With th Tories . auAaheaiexj J I ted to Bull tosrether in the utmost harmony, and, that too. a-anst the - ; ' , ..:?, - Liberal party that has done-more for the ireiana in iweniy y wrt. , tuau Tiao Vi'aira ilnnn in n.n hiinflrpd and I fift g That there ia an .alfi- ane Lmea iS plain o-oagb lhe proceedi ng8 of the tarliamentk h But it is a very absurd ' allian6e, and ! because there is no probability that it , -c " c 4 ' "l,:Ji: L last. For such a, commingling r can of jarring, warring elements,, to bar-1 monize would be as astonishing as iqr j - j mziA .n;maio I in opon each othe, and th uM be no crowls and no fighting, tit ! is mute nnt.nrinns Liiat it lSiiue one 1 inciple of Toryism in dealing with Ireland to be severe ana repressive. The New York Times doe not over state when it says of the newf alli- ance and the vote of the Tories against the Liberals for feeing severe: IT "Now. if there is any proposition which 5pt5 .aa Hnn m rrpi.mi nriTHsi.' !1 men by England or Englishmen within hur.j man memory, and that the pretenses to, the contrary are merely Irish lies. A ho Uis- I ceeaea upon tne assumption mat mere nao i been such injustice, : which needed to He re-. 1 pairea, anaccoraingij ijjoee measures ires are vu regarded by Tory peers and squires npnppi ni inp rom ninni niuH lv nmi i i nnx m -iTZtZlZZZrr iTil cj of Mfi Gladstone. Their qtiarr! witklirV.i'yVf th Tetania ia that thpri hitt tot hlniTMi I ; . : - . ,.t lrisamen enougn nor pui aown aiapraer i Tore, a Liiberal Government is arraicnfed by b o . ' -t I an Irishman for undue severity we elould . j - expect to see all the Tories in botli Ilbuses rauying 10 im suppyti. , 1 The London gas'eosts seventy Cents, I per5 thoufsand,' while in frew York it is $1.75, TheXbndbh cbmpanie are restricteoftoertain ,?ofiW .New. York Times ures that this '-r ahMilri ha ilnnft tuitli fha iMta'nAiiin'l. I " fa -fnies in that city. Companies have . . .. . V ... V,a Ir'nrw ii'r' rPK- 'ft jV.1.i ... .i b I .' i T 1 "8U "4 ""J1 S ..w oases us discussion upon thaXiOridou . . . . t I management in contrast with' thajt of New York. 'It aaye: 1 "We may at least recognize tho force of the maxim that 'where combination iajpos1--sible competition ia impossible,' and resort to regulation and imitation instead of en couraging new companies. We cannot get rid of tbe capital unnecessarily invented," but we can distinguish between that actu- ally invested and that whlchia wholly ficti tious. Then we can re&lrict 'dividemfe to not more that ten per cent, on actual capi tal and limit the price accordingly. It is only by this policy of regulation by pijblic. authority that we can hope to secure any thing like a fair price for gas." . FROMISCUOUS 81XGIXQ, New York Times. -The new movement in favor of the regulation of promiscuous sing ing should have the earnest support of all rightminded men and women. The spread of this vice within jthe lant twpntv vpara baa ' "hppn fparfilf'ir f .r f lieB in the United wbere t J,rfr I 18 not at least one member who is l aumcveu to singing. . j i ! Singing, .when practiced bj .oda- I catea antt capabja gineers, bas itslun- doubted-yaluV , hasbe.med cal art; butVheneitJber singinc or rnjedn. j icine is .pTactiedby.ap unqualified- 1 P8?" 16fls axsnrsej to me coramani- W' ,Ahe - pubiio, is at present a inercy of ithe '' rocompetiPRt ginoer. At. evorv imncH Wt.h. I ra t - " VI LDCU U WUU UrBLKUUX Ul 1 n r. .Usually the Offender is of Hhe' fefci nine sex, Dut occasionally a vodnfr .. I l.' tl U' .i ' ' 4.." i uiau wup uas neuner voice nor metn kv i oa is a prey to the habit of sinffihcr. ! ? 7u o. . r.. "Tr "f"' w; r4 ' I nr . :,i r v u . f I tion in the State when the walls of her dol- vv e an ktjow wuaimappens wnen per legeVshalt have lost their' attractivenesSind young lady Is- urged to sing some- patronage even though ak the same i time thing. She first declines, and tien be walls pf ber jUniversity shall jhave be after a, Kttle drgihg-goes' to the piino comeprowded. The people, feel thisind and releasea vmm" i i TiW, il fs on this ccont they are watchfulTof, -So. ? - a ? Z w a qin, if not p08itlvely dissatisfied with,' what ihe sharp yoice, and She does, not know state is doinir for th. TTnivprt: wii . how -'to produce it. She flats 4nd sharpens and, proves hftself ,' entirely ignorant of the mean jng of thejdm-1 I poser , The hearers aft expectedito Bit sxui ana listen; ana. when she has flr,;oV.QrJ t,r .,4. ; j or be regarded as brWaUy de. IfJ- iu.oU,u..MM.Hpuue uiaiHe ner er praipa aer eousistenoy-ilemands tterttheBhouldaskfornothersoig and when this is over if there4e In'f .other victim Of ne or she must, be called upon'for a Bong. , . -ft r ,uu "earer- the termer kit Dree9 a heartless ind fference to the I ears or , omer people, and frequently ' cruel delight in inflicting naln. lhe, lislejierfshejewoman,' is filled, with contempt if or the singlr, and secretly asks herself how a girl can possibly make such an -pbject of. herself. If the listener is a . man, he sometimes breaks the third couit mandment mentally, and in any case esolves j.hat he will never, "marry a singing girl There are whole com munities where the girls are growing into embittered old maids and tbe men are becoming dissolute bachelors, all because of the prevalence , of , this singing vice. Doctors, are constantly telling us that we areTa nervous and overexcitable people, but they rarely point out that the cause of this state of things Is promiscuous singing, It is the fatal facility with which J.ne enect of this sort of sineinais UUtt"J! pl.-tfro4aaBrufc wnen ine omces almost eauallv iniurions t n both ai nrr. are beingttfbnted people. beJieve the piano can be bisect as' an accom- panimentthat leads- thousanas or girls to sing. Ask them to stand up and sifg willoutiie pianaind they wvildrefse: t4e iddeccy othe m? 6d th.cpildMot Hin4ttced4 losing. When, however, promm ous singing is, so to speak, gilded by thi.pianoHfc, Loses- half-itarr r epiilsiTe- rwitiff ahn6t.Wfl mfl .jaai, piAoolwfc ,UHade . . - ' . 1 nvwlwmadeilessf reputeive, compra3 vy innocent gisano y "not 'et'.Krlro41v1'1derirav0d Will sing yjr llanoito jassUt, tiveiy innocent gins ana yumiR mvu- them. What we wan u. 10 uJ abollish thn niano. Were this done- ly lint -roost hardened singers STfe Aftef all. the reformers must appeal l". not ' 4o force,' ' but , to moral j suasion. ! -The v mosV' gOito oujaybimg wmen and show, tem the s--iJoa.ffn ginging.: TJjey muati appeal ed the; better nature of thpse who naye rauen victims to this vice 1 and 1 give "them ESSi. ! 'pWonf. riprhana. those who' have snnic irom tno niano. aou ureriaau songs o the banjo;. psendo;Afrioan , , 0?n, 't, bMh .it Ui t i . . j . j " .w r- - tie aspiration after virtue left- in his or her heart, and Knay be snatchfed as a brand from the'bUTnWg. 1,. l -- At this dafethe people of the Sort th. love the -restored Union! aud would fiffht for .its maintenandel if a n .oo.;i.n ua:.' --t--.- t . - - -j c A PPl- uag,u7 kim-bw,. years re ighty atid traqijCndent.The local aelf;Qvr hu LpenTestorert., . .Afieoa arQ.nptbayo.7, -m , ..,'-.. . - - , nets to bar the way. to. love , all Arr- i t !if i - rj.:-''- t a ungion. j Aemocraiip, a resmenii, biuc lu oru.ciDVu o uviitibai uuviatuci wtj.ii 'trif ,TiiJ: ii. i.ii t . swiii i.tT ill j Rn. I'eaceiDTe- I .. .. , . . k ,. . A. . l . I ' . vans m an the land, is or tn una Qduth, ' and '' the cause'- of this 'Section j was sufficiently awakened when'a' Rebab- Jican Supreme ' Ocurt dected ahat AHington belonged of righttol the on oLW-augusnwrwistm. . !Anong Mf. Gladstone lajid .? i .V .pari.y. . liei W 7 nhinml iU nnt 1 1 L-hl rr that 'fi Trro o I " Government at London wlii'ioae! re- Imaiiiih favor withJ Attiericans It IjWAH larlw th.Whie. ptAmTli i n l.tlie fallen Minbitrv that madelne ne- AAQ.i n ... l.A 4aMnnn pessary f the tyrannym "Ireland ,Whenver Mr. Gladstone had his Wu way, mild -measures -iWere . -. J . at tempted, Untoward, eyeAtA: usually intervened to giva .Uia ..discordant jparts of his Cabinet, their, cue, jaud coercion wpuia . thereupon . result. The Arms and Coercion Acts., how g6in out of force by limitation. were caused directly by the crime at "1'henix 1'ark. A more utterlv ab horrent act never darkened th page of a popU1-history, ' Ifo Hliol ioW Secretary thus murdered Was (the bearer of Gladstone's message! of peace, which had been wrung from his Cabinet onlyif at great price. . It may have- been aipe dient for, , 1'arnell to defeat t Glad stone, but in thntnd' the Tories Will deal with Ireland still more AelSehlV Ireland shouldhav.e.her; owp legisla ture and Qpvernor; AmVricana know how poor a boon evegso , great a concession w otld.W; ' yet the dai is far off when the ConseHatlf b1 hlig- lishman will see hit way clear to iny mch readjustmmt. At least, thai m ,LoryiSm,and tb opard does hoi caancroDia sDots. -i ne vonner1 letoD- ards, like Disraeli and .CburtMili;1 sometimes annoy Uieir parents, but timo allays their democratic fevet Qhicago Current. I OWlt STT,i:OTK9IPOBAlS. Obviously North Carolina cannot'aaord la her legislative capacity to v do ahytUing to iaApai t ihe prosperity of any of het: Uae 1T. !. T j . . . TT'TOffiZ'TOT J - w- vmuwm vuau Am ua LU I Carolina must have a fosterincr' eve ti inn' 1 tn malt n v TT- 3.J. I wc upuu ucrwuiYBriyi I tie manner of doing it, Monroe Enquirer- I .ffres: . , . : . ! The Free Press believes that no ,impiire 1 or incompetent man should be appointed to I via " me nret quesuon nai..snonia Dansxea oeiore' a man' is an i ;i,i . s ... ... . rr:. and caab many more capable men for every office tnan there are ofuces-aod'he'belongTtp PuUcal, party in authority,, give him true to what he believed Wa8 'the best Ihter- est of the country.-.iNfli man has adaim what they could to olace the Dartv 'then! in' power in -control oi W&in.Kinsio ' Free f ; .7 n Jr. TT. The will .of the late Hon Biah, ard T. Merrick waatyedwiih, Ue JRegister to-day. The will is a modeTof ' simplicity and brevity; Deceased says simply: 'I give and devise to my beloved' wife, Mamie Merrick, all my estate and property of ahy kind,, nature and description, and whereyer situated: such as may be in the District jof Columbia, in the State of Maryland, ahd in the.State ot . Illinois, to her and ber heirs forever." The will is dated May - 25, 1880.' Morton F.,MorxihjaaJifienappoiated exec utor under a $20,QQQ bod. MrSuMerrick, it will be remembered, has died,aince the death of her husband. Wash. Post. ' Young and middle-aged men 'suffering from nervous i debility, : loss of memory, premsture old vage, as the result 'of bad ' habits should send 10 cenJ stamps for Sw00,?11""" means of cure. , Address World'a Dispensary Medical Ae- eocmtion, Buffalo; N.Y 7rT . r"T7 I ia giviDg mem lo tnose. who have ddne THE LATEST NEW 8. FROM ALL FAETS OP 1 X:-& 1 , FOREIGN W - t r. 4- laasucre f Frcncb CT, the i Klas of 'TBaxiomey A Feast to be Blade of tbe Prisoners The Rebels Attack Kf ala and are Defeated wltb Heavy liOsa ;" " r ' f fit Cbtet).the Morning Star 1 , t , JffDOiC jiny'il. A "dispatch received ara tuy-Xkmag eWl.homey, Western thin, n th a lartra iimo haa mifioflrrpn Airica, with & large army, has massacred la&j;rencnut toe protected villages, ine Kine has also, the disDatch savs. captured oe, thousand. .yfeiiQh.prisofiers and ihe and Uis iOfloiir jPogOBe yj yai uieni. a LaNDOXpJolv 21.MAiliBpatch from Cairo says' news has jreachedr ihera froto Kassala, to the elZecC that atarge ioice ot.TeDeia at tacked that oplace an&,inade several at tempts tocairy it by aasault, :They were finally repulsed, and the garrison at Kassala ioUawiBit nrriae. victory captsiBa w re Dei camp, .witwa'JUQQuaan4rejiand sheep and seVen hundred Hfleau The eomy lost three thousand, men, killed and' wounded, while the garrison's casualties were ; small. Texas. , , iv. j , ; OntraM by tbe Indlaa on,J BorUr n t7-Atnt Thirty Bexlcn JUled. ,1T Tslejranh.to a Jfornhu Btar.i Galveston, July J21-A Ban Antonio specUil U the Galveston New says a private letter from- Kinney j county .states that a hostile band of Indians, 'taking' advantage of the withdrawal of the cavalry from this district, are at large on : the frontier. I he writer f state that two. Mexicans, kt the mouth of Pinto Creek, eight at Loayegas. and about twenty at other points, hav been, killed in the trans Rio Grande,' ne$r the bordec,vby th Indians, and that a balnd of fifteen jaidipg warriors have been, in Kin ney,, pea ttfannip brothers' anche.' So lar as eameu no ios8,yi ,iuu uaa aueuueu j uk, ;n c . 'L.nww -4 .(.! nl'i'i .Alt'- ,pn Uf u4f edTIOBiit aUar-Ire In 'KANSASf rrtr July SkTae'' times' Maytffle ilo.;' special aaysiUhe tovin of Skid nioe was burned Sunday Lossi esti mated iat Nearly i $100,000. Among th chief 'losers are Markland,'Brls fc Col , dry goods and groceries,- $14,000; W. H. Bar ber,amef $7,O00i Cftrrer Ridgeway, liinber insnrance is.OOO. ' The poslofflce I was destroyed but moat of the mails were saved: Thi fire started by . j boys playing jw-ith mftthe ia aiiav mnw 'r."" ' t the;istuMus. I itie.r. jt! malalanlet Admiral ?ou- r ft,-liIlvaooBT Sail Xr Hampton RaadiLN 1 t.'TL h:l '.L . tHj TlcrapB to the Mornmc Btar.k "Wsttrotdir: July J 1. Admiral Jouett, under date of , July 14th, telegraph tbe Secretary of the Naw. from Sanaailla: "Every thing remains qiiiet and unchanged in tnts vicinity and ' eft the Isthmus. I shall soon,' eaiL for - Hampton t Roads jwilh the Ttnneasea , The Yaniic will remain on the Colombia coast." . , THE INDIANS. An I Kalian Police Force Orsanlze4 by I' Cen. Sheridan. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Kansas City, Mo:, July 21. The Times' Fori Heno special says: Gen, Bheridaa has organized an Indian police force, 6om fnsed ot one hundred young Cbeyeqnef. t is said that the General in his report will a f4 at .T -'-- . t aiuiouie ue uiasaiisiacuon among me in fdli&tr4ifeftyxto the eatlle leases- i manjtob2. The Trial or Louis Rlel Commenced. lUy Telegraph to th Morning Hlar.l .Wixnetko July 21. The trial of Louis Hie), for high treason, began at Iiegina J es- leraay. ' New York Stock JTIarket Feverteli 4n4 - ' irrnl.r. ; v . i Iby Telacraph U the Xornmjr Star.l . Kaw Toitxj Walltreet, July 21. ll . i.xne stqcK, market has been quite fever ish and irregular tljiis morning. At the bpenfag' Western' Union, 1 Jersey Central,1 iXlouisTlWe &.Kaahvilte and - Oregon Tr ana- conVaental were J jtp i per cent. Jtfgher, anu me rest or ine active list t to i per cent lower. This was followed bt a further decTfne,Tedif Lake Shore, knd men a rauy oi j 10 1 per cenr., .which was gainled by Lake Shore;' thh a later jde icline. which , was general, but . which; Was checked shortly before Xljociock. , JJd Pacific has beejj the weak stock on the fisL selling down -if1 pe'r cent, 'a fractlonT or which nwasi later recovered.- Grangers have been prominent for then:, strength. At II o clock the market was weak and not Tar from the ' opening priced. Total sales for tbe first hour; 120,000 shares.' j - tt iThe? library oft the late .Richird Orant White is to be sold at auction ., It is especially' rich ih Shakes'peajrean edfttms and commentaries. " ' i;f " - a 1 1 IRON ' hea&ache" s ' " ' indigestion1 mm , RVOUS PROSTRATION! MALARIA" CrllLlS and FEVERS TIRED FEELING GENERAL DEBILITY j PAIN in the BACK & SIDES 1M? TJRE BLOOD , CONSTIPATIQN FEMALE INFIRMITIES RHEUMATISM . j NEURALGIA- KIDNEY AND LIVER ! TROUBLES 1' POR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTL The Genuine ha Trade Mark and crossed Red Unes on wrapper. TAKE. NO OTHER. JyS7D4Wly tooortrm ' arm iy Notice. All pHE 00PABTHBB8HIF0P HANCOCK A DAQ- GlOT was' dissolved on June 1st In consequence of the death of Mr, B. T. Hancock All nart l ed to present them, and those4 Indebted wul ptose,maka promptpavment. W. T. DAGGETT. ING PURCHASED THE ENTIRE INTER- est of my late partner, Mr. E. T. Hancock, In the badness lately contacted by Hancook Dar-g-ett, I hereby solicit a continuance of the pat ronage so liberally W-stowed upon them, 3yUm W.T.DAGGETT. BITTERS CJDMMERCIAIL W l I, hi I N O T O N V!AH K K T STAR OFFICE, July 21, 4 P. M. SPIRITS TURPENTINE The mnrket was quoted firm at 34J cents per gallon,. with no sales reported ROSIN The market was quoted quiet at 87J -cents for Strained and 92i cents for Good Strained, with sales as offered. TAR The market was quoted "firm at. $1 20 per bbl. of 280 lbs, with sales at quo tations. CRUDE TURPENTINE-Market steady, with sales reported at $1 10 for Hard and $3 00 for Virgin and Yellow Dip. COTTON-The market was quoted quiet, with no sales reported. The following were the official quotations: Ordinary... ... .. 7f cents "g tt. Good Ordinary. . . 9 Low Middling 9 Middling 10 " " Good Middling:. . . 10 ' PEANUTS Market quiet, with sales as follows: Extra Prime 4447 cents; Fancy 5155 cents, and Extra Fancy 5860 cents per bushel of 22 lbs. RICK Market steady and unchanged. We quote; Rough: Upland $1 001 10; Tidewater $1 151 30. Clean: Common 4i4f cents; Fair 4f5 cents; Good 5 5 cents; Prime 56 cents; Choice 6J 6i cents per lb. "' TIMBER The market continues steady and unchanged, with sales as follows : Prime and Extra Shipping, first class heart, $900 10 00 per M. feet; Extra Mill, good heart, $6 508 00; Mill Prime, $6 006 50; Good Common Mill, $4 005 00; Inferior to Ordinary, $3 604 00. RECEIPTS. Cotton. . ..I . . 3 ibales Spirits Turpentine. . , .... 370 casks Rosin... 928- bbls Tar! 29 bbls Crude Turpentine 122 j bbls DOITIESriC MARKETS , I By Telegraph to tbe Moraine Star.l i Financial. ! New York, July 21 Noon. lioney active, strong and easy at 1 per cent. Sterling exchange 484$ : and 486. State bonds neglected. Governments dull and steady. Commercial. Cotton steady, with sales reported of 500 bales; middling uplands 10ci mid dling Orleans if)4c. Futures barely' steady, with sales tat the following quotations: July ; August y. 85c: September u. 75c; October 9.61c; November 9.59c; December fl.60c. Flour dan and heavy. Wheat lower. Corn lower. Pork firm at $11 50 11 ,75. Lard weak at $6 85. Spirits turpentine steady at 376. Rosin steady v f l aoi T2. lrreignts nrm. Baltimore, July 21. Flour steady and quiet; Howard street and western 4uper $a004 00; extra $3 504 25 ; f am ily $4 605 25; city mills super $3 25 JJ 50; extra-S3 754 00; Itio brands Si 90 5 00. Wheat southern easy and a fraction- lower; western lower, closing dull; southern red 9598c; southern amber 98c 02; No. 1 Maryland 97ic bid; No. 2 western winter red on spot 9495ic. Corn southern dull and steady; western steady sad dull; southern white 57&58c; do yellow 5455c. i ' VOBEION HUHKBTO. IBy Cable to the Jfornlnz Star. 1 Liverpool, July 21, Noon. Cotton flat, with verv little doin? midfUinir nn- lands 5Jd; middling Orleans 5 9-1 6d; sales to-day of 5,000 bales, of which 500 were A a . ior speculation anu export; receipts 5,000 bales, of which 5.200 were American. Futures steady; uplands, 1 m c, August ana September delivery 5 24-4a5 26-64d September and October delivery 5 26-64 5 27-64d; October and November ;de- livery 5 23-645 . 24-64d; November and December delivery 5 22-64d; December and January delivery 5 22-64d. Sales of cotton to-day include 3,800 brnes American. ' j Bread8tuffs Wheat quiet and steady, with poor demand. Corn dull; demand poor. - if . . t . 4.00 P-M. Uplands, 1 m c July deliv ery 5 28-64d,: value: July and August delivery 5 B3-64d, sellers' option i August and ' Sentemher rlplivprv H Mfli1 aoHdra' options September and October delivery o ou-om, Duyers option ; Uctober and No vember deliveiy. 5 26-64d, buyers' option j November and Decerhrjer dfiliverv f! 24-B4l buyers' option; December And January i de livery 5 5-64d, buyers option January ...I Tl : J 1 - 1 t nw m . . i uu fcuruarr ueiivery o a-oia, value; .jrepruary' and March delivery 5 30-4d value. "Fnthres closed firm. " ' London, July 21, 3.30. P. M. Consols y for both money and account. . ; Nrw Tone RfcTiriarket. ( 1?! Y. Journal of Commerce, July20. ' . Rick 'There is a good jobbing trade at firia prices. The f olio win p- . the ntu. tions: Carolina and Louisiana; common to fair; 4J5ic; good to prime 5f 6c; cheice 41c: dutV naid. and 2ia24c in lvnrl. '"Patria iaSc; Java 5t5fc, .; ' . Cllartetoa Jllce market.., Charleston News and Courier, July M RlCE The m&tfcpt for rion van naipt. . today, , and no,, sates were made.,,; We quote; uommon at 4J4c, lair n at, 5 5. gpodatS5c, and prime at5 Sewer gas dodges past imperfect traps; confusing the sanitary engineer, bafflfng the doctor, taking possession pr yourhotse and killing you, or making 701! as invafid. If you are crippled or poisoned Brown's Iron Bitters can, dq : wonders for youi Dodce the artful dod?er bv ,blood, inylgorating your sygtem and en joy mg good healthy tMrs.. Spier, 83 Deca tur street, Boston, . says, J'Brpwn's Iron Bitters is.ju8t.lhe, thing for buildioe one FIRING iPHINA " IN ; PATENT PORTABLE (KILNS. CTBARNS, FITCH & CO , TORMKRLY OF AL- bany. N.T., are now located at Springfield,' Ohio. Manufaotnrhiit four sizes Kilns, 415, $20, $25 ftnd 845. Amateurs can now Sm thotr nam China wltn -great gnooeaa, with elase equal or better than can be, done In large aims, and at a pre a 1, BaTuiR- ro expense or .Express charges and breakages. Send for circular. , hTJSAKNS, FJTCH OO. ' JySSw - Springfield. Ohid. Ice I Ice ! Ice ! I THE SCHOONER ISAAC ORBKTON HAS A"R , rived with a cargo of .the beet HAINJt FLINT ICE, which I offer to Bell at ONE-HAXiF CENT PICK LB. at mv Ice House on Tkvlr Rfroat nr at. any of my loe Depots, or will deliver at the above price. Lower prices for large quantities. Coun try patronage reerectfullv solicited. Knnniai t- tention given to the Wholesale Trade. A rood m.ul& rorsale. B. H. J. ahkens. - my 9 3m Proprietor New Ice House. ISTTnHTilE TO CURE T la nt o n , .i fl,f oa wnen the p. impurities that dteflenrini i?iion m hiSi Jirupuons, Itching Torture t Trs' Hum H ing. Scaly and Pimply DicpII7 8Pcie8 f7'M Scalp, are most exlwi t&lM ny the Coticuba Hikhh economica!!; xx is a FACT Hundreds of letters in n of Which may be had bv r pnsseion( thorlty for thl "SSiJ, mail) Hie, of Which may be had b ur pnsseion( thorlty for the asserting?1 mail) a?e i Blood Humors, whS& st, Contagions, may Now ofulons.Inhf,i Patll internally, and Coticdra and r W Ud Pa, J? wuw of any othe, . uajatjsst ON EARTH Cuticcba Rbmedies are th r 7 ' on earth. Had the vomc1 ei!,i u'cu irum ir.. i hp. cvuri ., ' ,c"s.aii( , saved bertife. Mv armi h' I ' n: ul,. My arras, l,reai K coverea ior three years win iui uuree years , lu;!aauv. or cured nntU I used The Cfelhlli?ij ratlve powers of the Cuticuua pne "en paid hundreds of dollars for n.""9- ihi dlsesses of the blood and skfn aIclnfts'' S anything yet to equal the Citm Dnever C Sold by all drugslnts. PrV- r- Besolveot. ItOO; bOAP . POTTEB BTTO AHD ClTEMirAT. Cr, h tl CHOLERA AMI vu . " '"m FEvcd larialMlasmatic and Contain, or Fr u T JwrelL Prevented by'J? g CDncuRA Plahtkr over the 11 stomach, with frequent cWe. l,he over exposed to thes ffL.7?f .es' .m- plasters fail. Biciaus ana CoTBon. m 1XK UfiUG CnmS ly lP&Wlm , wed sat txnrt V4 im; Indigestion Cured I suffered for more than five years ml, indi gestion, scarcely able to retain the simplest food on my stomach. The burning Bensatkm wa al most intolerable, and ray whole system ws de ranged I was wakeful and could tot slw-J, ?M consequently rcore or less nervons all the time I declined in flesh, and suffered all the usual d,. pression attendant upon this terrible diseas- u a word, I was misrable. At last, failing !md relief hi anythlh" else. I commenced the un! Swift's Spacificj I bean to improve at once The medicine toned up tho stomach.-strcnati-"ened the digestive organs, and soon all thai la ning ceased, and I could retain food without d? fiCnltV- HfrVF TnT hptllth ij trmrt nJ . j j ,j f,"4, auu (.an vz anything In the shape of food, and digest it with out the slightest difficulty. I most checrfollj bear this testimony, because there are hundred. Buffering as I was, and I am snre they can hens readily healed. Take the prescribed d.- after eating, instead of before. JAMES MANN, No. 14 Ivy ft. Atlanta. Ga , Iay 13, 1855. Free from Malaria. In the fall of 1S84 I was taken with a t-3e r.f malarial fever which' prostrated Pie both Mr and mind. I was drugged after the old fa-!iimi with' mercury an1 other mineral mixtnres, but With no good results. My health was shattered and my energy gone. My less and feet would swell, and I had what everybody thenght was dropsy. These symptoms alarmed me, and I we ready to grasp at any renaedy snjrrt-stcd. A friend advised me to try Swifts Spei iti I pro cured three bottles and commenced its n e The swelling soon subsided. I have taken the llm-e bottles, which have made a perfect cure, aud l Jeel like a new man to-day. There never wa-i a more meiitorloui medicine offered to suffeimf humanity. It has wrought wonders for tne. WILLIS Ji)nES. Leesburg, Lee County, Ga , March 11, l-"- for sale by all druggists. Treatise en Blood and Skin Diseases mailt d free THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 'i, Atlanta, ia 117 W. 23d St., N. Y. 3an 20-D& Wlv fr su wc nrm en w (POLLS 25 YEARS IN USE. Tha Greatest Medical Trinmpli of tha Age! -SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. the head, with a dull nsatioi Intt . ftaektarc Pain nnder the h'dd blade, Fallneii after eatmn, mth aj s tmeUaaticm t exertion of bod ' ""JJJ Irrttabllityof temper, Low spirit Weariness, Dizziness, FlntteriM Heart. Dots before the ecl'l::ti ver the right eye, eftlesAti fitful dreams, Highly colored Iriae. f ' CONSTIPATION TTJTT'S PIIXS are 1 especially to uch eases, one doso ea851Wrer. . cbanolfeeltagastaswmhthesn They Increase the Appetite ,ni lc txxlv to Take on S,leli.tnQ? zD5 Ziton 08 the PteesUve Qryarts , "fgt., TUTI'S EXTRACT SJSJPW Renovates the body, te strengthens the weak, repairs Ju; the system with pure blood and ten tones the nervous FJ?ffiuga braS, and- imparts the vigor 01 b" $1. Sold by druggists. icf,wTorlU OFFICE 44 murraySt., aew 1 ,, jaaao u-aw.zy ... buyvdh CABLTON HOUSE, f arsaw . Ijnijl County, U QN LINE- OF WILMINQTON AND Railroad, Similes from Wilmington. Li- mnnlied with the best t e A (VULVJ fi TV tfcj J Tt , country affords.' Rates of Board very res- aeo 01 xi n u . A Proclamation. . mmq REASf TTNOW YE ALL THAT AT inj- - JVtheyearacTOlheadisoes -- c Beit, therefore, Proclaimed hat n place,P PEBTS, No, 7 South Front ftrel'ii,anlpo. , get an No. 1 Haircut, Shave and K eOf to need of these commodities" tberea requested to caU at old ito- eand first-ri few more left, and tto Prog new a and onfl nniitA von off men are aiwi tag o serve them. Keapoctiu. ppEMrKRT. my 31 tf .The .Person County New& Published at KOXnOBO.. WIIlTAKEli & CIBC ' 1 Editors and Proprtetor . f & m,- vmra hatOhe largest, , paper published or ctrculatea KoM Of North Carolina. Hum Advertising rates, very iiw"- v l IB'. T-WTT I.uu per ywr.
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 22, 1885, edition 1
2
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