Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Aug. 16, 1885, edition 1 / Page 2
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a; in SoKh Carolina, is pableddy,ex -ou-Uv, t $7 00 per year, 4 W orjs months. a M for three months, 1.5C (for two monthB7Sc. , .r one month, to mall rabsoriberB. DeliTerto iiy subscribers at the rate of 15 cents per week - aay parlod from one week to one year. - fH 8 WEBKLT STAR" Is pnblled FrWaj fnomin? at SI 50 per year, $1 00 for six months l ents for three months. . i ; - ; t - ' ADVERTISING RATES DAILp.-esauai iue day, $1 00; two days, II 75: three .toys, $250, two weoks, $e M - three weeks 18 M; one month, l mAnfha ftfln 00. Ten F ines of solid NonDarell type make one square, f ? ; All announcements of. Pain, FestlvaJA BaJOs Hops, Pto-Ntoa, Society Meetings,. .PoMca! Meet asiT&o., wulohargredregnlaradTertlslngrates Notloes under head of "City Items' 90 cents per ; me tor first Insertion, and 15 oenta per line for -..aca subsequent Insertion. - ; . 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Mwij j r - 4 . -- . r - . Advertisers should always specify toe Issue of aanea they desire to advertise in Wliere ;no is ue Is named the advertisement wDl b Inserted n the Dally. Where an advertiser contracts fot the paper to be sent to hmr -lurtafr the -fcimt Bis advertisement Is In, tht proprietoi will onlj be -esponslble for the maHing of the paper to his ad dress. . . . ,v j- ; The prmng Stari By WILLIAl)! H. BERRARD. WTLM T FUTON. N. C. S ATTTRD a ? EtB si A.XjGrY 15, 1885. EVENING EDITION. SO jrOHNSTOI? ON . , " JACKSON STONEWALL . t ' Gen. Joseph E. Johnston is unques-. tionably an able ' soldeirt would not be possible to match Robert E. Lee, Albert Sidney Johnston, Thom i - as J. Jackson and Joseph" EJ John ston on tbe other aide. Gen.) Jo Tr.liViatnn ioTTirTir!.17P'rtr et Tnan. lint . "VUUUOWU .J v - J 7 is still remarkably preserved. He has been criticising "Stonewall" Jackson,' and, like Genr. Longstreet, does that splendid , soldier marked, ip justice., He regards Jackson as merely a gi?eat division commander and by no means a "great strategist.; His opinion I is being reviewed in the Southern pa-' pers. and there is no cause for fear that the great .soldier's fame, will not be taken -care 6f.J a6en.lAJbnn8ion says: ' , ."The action for which he got the iqost praise wa3 a defeat; and that was the battle of Cross Keys. Jackson and E well 'a corps ' were opposite to Fremont and Shields, and x Jackson was in command. v Shields was advancing on the! bthtf jBide?of;the river from Fremont, and had' comDarativtelv jacKson s corps was toe stronger 01 ine Confederates. Jackson, detailed Ewell to attack Fremont, while" he ' watched Shields - and prevented r him ; crossing- the rivpr. - Ewell defeated Fremont, and then Jackson , - crossed the river and Attacked Shields, hut he was beaten an tft'Ewelf came to "his aa- sistance. Yet Jackson forthls.received he thanVa- rf r!nni7Tft9 Th lflfHi 'nf a man with a superior force watching-an inferior, while he despatches a weaker force; against . a snrjerior. is scarcely strateev.' I , -r iW " J Now this criticism is unworthy of' - the merest .tyro in war and because it is not founded upon t actual facs. Gen. Johnston shows most :concln sively that he;has not studied Jack son's most . brilliant and startlingjy successf ul campaign. He wbuld . do well to read Dick Taylor's 'Vigorous" - and most entertaining book,pabneyfs .jam? ui o av&ouu, ituu leueuii aibiio i in the Century Magazine. He would - - ao wen to study i ackson s own re ports. - If he will do this he will not ,8peak of E well's jporps when Ewell commanded a division in r Jackson's force. He will learn many -things of -. which he is clearly very ! ignorant now. If there is any one thing -upon which Europe and America, the v - North and the South, are-agreed as - to the ciyil war, it is that Jackson's . genius , shone out with v exceeding -, splendor in his ,x wonderful sValley Campaign. It gave him a great rep utation in military circles in Europe ' and England, and caused the famous war correspondent" of ithe London Daily ilTewSt Archibald Forbes, ,to say: recently in a magazine article that since Napoleon the world had yr seen ; but two men with genius for war, and they , were Jackson, the Southron, and Skobeloff, the Busi Let the surviving: Confederates in ; -' Lujr VL ormerjn v irginia jte . allowed a word, land they will tell : Gen. Johnston more than he knows! The soldiers know who; were Gene-: . , rals in fact and who were only :Gene- lata by title. GenXea hsA the follest opportunity, of knowing Jackson's merits, and when his great Lieuten ant received his fatal and most un. fortunate ; wounds, his 'commander wrote to him that the "Confederacy was belter able to lose Lee than him self. He even said he had lost his xight,armXherVc Witness than the. noble and great Lee. v; When Toombs and ! Jo J ohnston and Longstreet undertake to reverse the judgment of contemporaries and of tbo6;!6!1?,; of j histo ric records they are simply engaged in a very unprofitable and idl busi-'' ness. It was tbej owner ofthe gun; who was kicked over when he went out for.Vduck or plover.'? nAHONEISn : AMD THE GBATS. DB1H6- Even suDDOsiner that the Dembcrata !of Mrginlft stood-with' Mahon ' and his crew on the public debt question no patriotio Virginian could - hesitate as to which party he t would 'affiiiate j with and support. In Virginia : it must be verymuch like it is in North Carolina. vThere are. variant view, amongn Democrats as'-toi the Blair. bilV the Tariff, internal taxation and so on, but when it comes to handing over the State into 1 the keeping of i the party that robbed, defamed and impoverished it there is no difference of opinion among the true men of the State as to what should be doner All national issues are laid aside for' the time and an earnest, united fight is made as against a common enemy. .r In Virginia, aside from a question: of honesty and financial policy, bere are the - most pressing , reasons why the white people of - that Bection should. have control of the Statel It will not begin to do for a party made up of a few white leaders, an igno rant. white following of some tens of thousands and oyer 100,000 black, to dominate a great State.. .That means ruin and wrong. . The Philadelphia Times is . a semi Republican : paper with- credit for .sagacity. It stands aloof, and sees the drift of affairs and says of the Virginia outlook : -4'' ' .r . "The Democrats Ulk like men of settled convictions and definite, principles who are trying to do the best that is possible for. their State, while the tirade of the Mahone people suggests nothing more thanan un-T disciplined gathering or freebooters and camp followers in pursuit of spoils. $ . vf Vnd this is really the present position of the two parties - in Virginia" Since the practical, settlement of the debt question there are no longer any well defined issues that are not . wholly . absorbed in the; one paramount issue of an orderly and. honest administration, -and the intelligence 'and honor and integrity of the State are arrayed upon one side, with ignorance and scaun drelismand lawlessness upon 'the other. The contest is of .the deepest importance for Virginia and indirectly lor every state, and the mental condition is not to be envied pf those Northern partisans who eive their sympathy to Mahone and his meaJbecause it suits them now to call themselves: Repub lican8." , BOSS CLEVELAND'S ESSAYS. . We have not read Miss Cleveland's yohjme.of essays: HWe have iad,no curiosity.1 to do so and : have been awaiting the judgment, of. critics to see if it would pay to fead and to invest 1.50 in a copyvj It takes just as much time to read a .third-rate production as it does a first-rate pro duction. Tjnrr if precious, especial ly to a-.busy man. Well t we have waited . and .thus far have ; seen no opinions in the best critical jonrnals(or monthlies., sThe Chicago Current n is uot-specially strong ? in .eriticism. It says of MsTCfeYeland's volnmel "These essays shownthe writer to be a studious 4eeply-reIigious,;j earnest, atd romewuai - aggressive.,, woman. 1 iney are not remarkable for .scholarship;- logical thought, or profound insight That some ability in handling the various subjects coiupassea in tne book is shown may be readily cohceded, but-f or i amument tbe reader is too of Wri given mere assertions, and. for facts insubstantial 'idealization?, f r uer use or tetms technical with the great puuoaopuers renuers ner at times unneces sarily obscure,- and her diction is often marred . by colloquialisms wholly out of 1 L. Jl . . . . piace in a proresseaiy scnoiarjy treatise. : The severest and - most elaborate review, of the volumd is in the New Orleans States There are an editorial and a special critique upon it- Of coarse we cannot , undertake to say how much of justice there is in it, but tUe States is thoroughly Dem ocratic and a faithful supporter of the Cleveland Administration. It would, theref ore, probably say what it could that was favorable to ;liss Cleve land's literary adventure;; :;.We . have given the opinion of a Northern literary journal, and . we ? will repro duce some extracts from the, dictum of a Southern : daily from - near ' the Gulf. . . The States says editorially: "In the mere matter of literarv comnos! tion alone, to say nothing of the higher ele ments of thought and argument, they are not above the average of articles in a fairly good school magazine. It is not a very encouraging sign of the times that thfa volume should Itsve been rushed through seven editions. Why, the thought of it is enough to make the corpse of the late Mrj Robert Montgomery turn about in the grave." - - .... - we now turn to d,be ? book cntio whoiscusses the book with c some elaboration. , He is very sharp in his Analysis of, her discussion of George Eliot, and it must; be saidthat there is no little force in the way the critic applies his logic, but we can not fol low hini.: Here is -what" he? says of tne style of the bookie r "Her style of writing is no whit superior to her thinking, and .is. -in' fact, a fitting vesture for it. Lightly glanced at, it seems to have a dash of buoyant vigor, a fibre of "uncontrollable muscularity, which - might be the expression of teeming thoughts and fancies that crowd J I60 thickly tot regula ted utterance. " Read and examine, it Is" a " iudet5ongeriesf 'stilted fand" pedanticb verbiage, a string of hlghaounaing pnraees, well calculated to conceal by carrying the attention from.Ube vacuity of thought that lies underneath' 1 .The Vstvle. i moreover, is So overladen with, uncouth and r incongru ous similes and metaphors" pt tchiorkea in dtecriminatelv toeether.!' that It- -is quite , iiamnea ror &nv mirooae oi reaaiuK w ttu enjoyment v': i a ?He regards the otber.essays in ' the , volume as much : better -than ythe one on the English woman which is placed in fron;.v He says some of the essays are fairly readable,1' but : the ' one' on George Eliot is rfirst-jClass fu stian.' He,, complains . .pf Lfthef 5dognatism throughout, and says the th ought "is invariably second-hand." . As. we do not purpose - reading and reviewing ourselves . we have -given the above judgments, upposing',that our read era wouia ns;e to see.wnat is saia 01 a vork that has passed through seven editions at home and is to be printed at once in England. We shall be in terested in what the British- critics may say. The. good ; work of : DemocratiQ re form is notr confined to the Wash ington Departments or to the United States, but is extending to distant servants.", Eor instance, the Consul General at .Vienna, 1 Mr. Jessen, of Chicago,-has unearthed a long-stand-ing fraud that .has been perpetrated1 by his Republican predecessor in of fice, one Weaver. This Blainite ac tual ly. managed to steal $600 every year by, an , arrangement he made with Dr. Herz. This fellow Hera proposed a continuance of the same f fraudulent arrangement to Mr. Jes sen, and in doing so be revealed the rascality, 'which -the'Consul General promptly reported to the State ; De partment at Washington. s The way Weaver worked' it was I to .' appoint Herz -Vice-Consui and .'.Hera in turn furnished a house " for -1600, !but charged nothing. This $600 was an nually pocketed by. Weaver. Nice that. , s'm ! We cannot understand how it is that sane persons are so often incar cerated in asylums for the insane in tbe North. We have read of seve ral such cases, and oar dispatches of ye$terdy reveal the act that a lady has- been recently discharged from the State Insane Asylum of Pennsyl vania -who has actually ' been kept there through , twenty-seven long years. Think of such a fate. Locked up for that long period upon a false plea of insanity while' alt the time you are sane and are surround ed by nnfortaoate Victims who can not : possibly be companions to you. We can scarcely, imagine a more hor-' rible fate than V this. ; What; can be' said too strongly in denunciation 'of a system that tolerates such inhu man outrages?.Cf5i I , A w"tr; "ghing bimself VfFair, Play,", in the Wilson Advance,yrTiieB three and - one-third 'columns in 'de fence of the-University. As be re flects upon the motives of 11 papers who have presumed to .criticise, the, University, it would have been manly' if; he had signed .bis name." He asks ffor : fair criticisb," - but evidently means byr"f air" - criticism- that gofes' thewhoIe hogor tbeTUniversity. He calls men "irreconcilable" who objected.' to the way the election Of Professors was conducted 'and who oppose the free scholarship business.' It. will turn oat that the best friends of Chapel Hill' are those, who fight openly the 'free 'scholarship abuses and who are for making Chapel Hill an University in fact. .. ' . Mr..W; T. Stead is the editor of the London PaU Mall Gazette. He was born in 1850 and his father is a Congregational; minister. A sketch of him' says: ; ,."Wi T. Stead, has ; made his mark in journalism before he assumed the chair of the influential paper of ..which he is the editor..' He b a born, newspaper man,- and possessed of high mental and moral culture. His character is blameless, and the power of his work iin the premises is augmented by the unassailable purity of his life." : He succeeded . that distinguished literatus Mr. John Morley,' as editor of the Gazette. - v ; ' ", ; , Mrs. ; Argles is the real name of the "rDuches8," the author of Molly Bawn," and not as given, from mem ory yesterday: -:"ff- ' -.- ; .V, A True Picture. t '" I v Atlanta,- GaJ . ConatituUon. "I .know 1 Jefferson i Davis inti mately,'! says !. Dn ? Divine, of this city, formerly a neighbor of Davis in Mississippi," 'and the prevalent idea that he js dyspeptic or sour . is very -unjust , J3e isja great student; muclt'gtreff to h1s'b66k"s,v"arid.coffse quently not -on the 'hurrah' order of men. But he is as -gentle as a wo man, as approachable as a Jhud, ana. his sympathies are readily worked up when the stories of the suttenng aro poured into his ear. - Davis is one ot thoseimen whoSe fame will-come out in bold- telief when his detractors are dead and forgotten." ... CUKRENTCOMnEIfT. & . I,1 i i .Jr.ji. ' ';r.';t..''v:',:yii ,rjn fortunately,' the country has hot recovered from the demoral ization and 'degradation r of theiate war. of4 We have a different class of. legislators now from ? those 'of other days-rmenr of : moderate ability and less , prestise. men who manage to live in .great luxury; and yet; become millionaires on a salary ot;nye inQU"; sand dollars a year; and every sensi ble man nows it is not done, honest ly. Therf there is great extrayaganca and Waste in the management of pub lic; trusts,' with divers defalcations, not id !say downright swindling and stealings:-4 There is not that pervad ing 'moral c feeling, ' that sense of moral Obligation, that sense bf s per sonal1 responsibility, r that ' personal dignityjljself-respect c anda jhonor among the. people now that thefe was before tjie? iwar while publib men are less scrupulous.. Louis Christian Adogcxtte. .yf . . , Vi5-:;'- 1 -p- '; Many of the ! 1 Democratic "regulars'5 are?- counting upon this loyalty"oT thtfttnugwumps to Cleve land as sufficient to secure a solid In dependent support , to any kind of a Democratic ticket which stands' upon a platfortn approving the Adminis tration, but in this they are mistaken. Between two equally good ' men the mugwumps will naturally choose the one whose election will be regarded as an approval ; ; of - the President's course, but they will not vote for a MJeffersonlau Democrat"-nor for a "Rock-ribbed Democrat," no matter what kind of a platform he stands upon.-riVLf Y. JSveningiJPost. It ErollpF THE :! JUJJGEii Camp Scales, July 29th, 1885. To the Adjutant' General, State pf North Carolina: - - SiR:'r-Your committee, have the honor to 1 report upon" the competi tive battalion drill upon which they have this da'y served as judges: The competing 4 regiments, assem bled for the first time as battalions in Camp Scales, showed a proficiency which is to your committee a source of both surprise and pleasure. We congratulate alKhe regiments on the remarkable progress made in so-short a time,' and, while the. selection of the best was not unattended with difficulty," we award the first prize to the First Regiment, Col. Cottcn commanding ' . 'Very respectfully, Your obedient servants,! . 1 ; Ultssbs Doubled at, .i.r'tBrig. Gen. Vols., w Jas. Z. Smith, Lt. J: S. N., Jos. B. Batcheloe, Jb., . I ' 2nd Lt. IJ. S. A ' r '.jv'.-s.i.:.!. Committee. . THE TRADE OUTLOOK: f ..Montreal Gazette, ,v.; ' The volume of business is not only increasing but the hopeful feeling Bliowa,np; ( abatement,: and. now 1 that the preliminary movements : of the fall season have been felt, a healthy d evelopmen may , be looked for. ( Calif oraia Commercial Heralds ; From everyquarter we note indi cations of an improved state of busi ness. , The v interior to wns of '. the State manifest more activity than they, have bad for more; than a year, while thej-est of the coast North jmd South tells , an equally good story, i , : New Orleans Commercial Bulletin. ' n 1 The indications 1 of improvement in trade generally, locally, i are becom ing more., pronounced. During . the last week-there waa a slight increase in tbedemand for money !at"soflle of the banksor the, -general wants of tra.de aggg"6 of. tle in quiry waa small and money continues pienutui ana easy OUR STATE CONTEniPOnARIES. 1st -Ooes the necessity exist, for such an organization as the" State Guard? ; 2d. Is it necessary 1n.' order to instil, proper. disci pline to order the Guard into encampment once a year? 3d. Is it prudent to hold an encampment, of all the companies at one point, and that in some extreme portion of the Statel. 4ta. Ought not the State bear the total necessary expense of tbe encamp ment? 5th. Ought the Commander-in-Chief to order the encampment , unless the General Assembly r has provided ample means to defray the 'expense of such en campment? " We believe a well organized State Guard for service, not for show is far better than the old militia system. , - . - i-V.-' .' i-K..."- , , We have no reason to doubt, and we do not doubt, that in every case they ehose the man whom jthey believed on the whole to be best qualified to advance the interests of the University. ,; But we are firmly convinced that when the Trustees undertook to con ciliate sectarian and denominational oreiu- aices uy uivioing out tne proiessorships to this and that religious body they introduced a principle ,whicu will work incalculable evil. It must necessarily prevent them from making the best choice in some cases; it will inevitably excite , jealousy and resentment in those denominations which .think they are not sufficiently represented in the Facul- . ty ; and it will lower public respect for the university, ine xrjistees have it now in their power to make theJJniversity the cen tre of the educational and intellectual life of the State, so that it shall command the respect and admiration of all; but they can not do it, ao long as eaph one of the dozen or more religious denominations in the State is encouraged to look forward to the election of a professor' as a possible oppor tunity of increasing its influence and of as serting its 'powerr -Respect for the senti ment of 'the community .demands that the professors in the University shall be Chris tians in belief, and men of exemplary cha racter. But beyond this the Trustees should not inquire. Charlotte Church Messenger. ; "Statistics ; show ;that' clergy men live about two years longer than law yers,, ; say a an, exchange. Probably the law vers live fast enough to more than make up the difference. Peek's Sun - - , . THE LATEST NEWS, FfiOU ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD r FOREIGN. - ' tXiorA Cbter Jastlee Colerlda married to an American tadj cholera Re ports Ste. ;,;r JBt Cable to the Mornin Star.F . : London.. August -15 Lord Chief Justice Coleridge was' married this afternoon lean' American lady named Amy Augusta Jack son "Lamford. -The wedding ceremonies were conducted privately A special li cense .was granted' August 10th, so that the marriage could take place at any time of day the parties wished. :' s : .' ;.-'. ' i MABSiELiiES, August .15. There were-twenty-seven deaths from cholera in this city during the twenty-four hours : ending at noon to-day. - ; . VDunstA, Augnst 15. It is reported that the cholera has broken out in Trieste. London, August 15 -The death of Mr. Buskin Js now expected momentarily. . v4 London, .August 15. The latest news gives a more' favorable aspect to the Af ghan frontier, subject, and Indicates a set tlement of the question involved, ! . r COTTON, i A Svnunary of the Crop to Date. ' " " IBy Teleirraph to the Morning Stax.1 New Yokk, Aug. 15. Receipts bf cot tonjfor all interior towns, 2,518 bales; re ceipts from plantations not reported; total visible supply of cotton for the world, 1,829,818 bales, of which 922.218 bales are American, against 1.692,810 and 954, 610 bales i respectively last year; crop in Sight 5,608,570 bales. . .... ; nn LiUU Gnters the syvtem from mifcncwa . eanises, at all seasoiuk . I. " Skatters the Herves, Impairs Digestion, and enreeoiea ue jaueiea. THE BEST TO NIC Quickly and completely cures Maliuia&nd Cbllla and Fevera. For Intermittent Fevers, Ijas ttnde, Lack of Knerjry, it has no equal. It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates tbe ap petite, and strengthens the nrascles and netres. It does not injure the teeth, cause headache, or Produce oonstipatkm all other Iron sMdietttst do. Fathzb T. J. RrTT.T.T. the patriotio and scholarly . Catholic Divine, of Arkansas, says: . - . - "I have osed Brown's Iron Bitters with the 1 est est satisfaction for Malaria, and as a prerentZTe of Chills and like dioeases, and will always keep it on hand as a ready friend.' Gennine has above trade mark sad crossed red lines on wrapper. Take ao other. Made only by BROWN CHEMICAL CO-BAL.T1MORE, MI. IiASiES' Hawd Book useful and attractive, eon-taining- list of prises for recipes, information about coin a. eto given away by all dealers in medicine, or mailed to any addiues on receipt of Sc. stamp. Jy27D&Wit too or trm arm JyCT ASK YOUR GROCER FOR 1 AND BREAKFAST DACON. NONE OBNTJINB I ' IMUM StARINQ OU PATENTCD THAOE-MAMKS, A UOKT ATTAOHCD TO THE STSIfM AMD I TM STSlPCn CANVAS. AS M THE CUT. deoS ly ' 'vredsat deeS "Fire-Proof Oil" ' JS BSTTXS THAN "KSSOSXNS OIL, OB any other Bnmlng OIL Can be nsed In any lainp ' For sale by ' ' i HOLMES A WATTERS. 7 North Front St. , - , HENRY HAAR, 701 Chesnnt St. r WM. OTKRSKN, oorner 5th and Market ' ' . ' QIBSCHKN BBO., corner Chesnnt andlfcBae. r. H. SMITH, oorner 4th and CampbelL J. C. STEVEN SON k CO., 617 North Fourth 8t. B.H. J. AHRENS, corner 7th and Market Sta. J. C. 8TKVKNSON, 1S1 Market . j H. 8CHULKEN, oorne.- 4th and Wainnt Sta. , J. H. BOE8CH. No. 801 North Fourth St. GEO. M. CRA PON, No. 8 South Front tit. i -GEO A. PBCK No. 89 South Front St. . t , Watch thia list and see lt -row. mh29tf ' i? Groceries, Proymons, Tolacco, Jc.l j500 Bbls 7L0TJB, all grades, '! 250 BagS COFFEE, Bio, lAguyra, Java, ; T5 80X68 D" Balsa andBELLIBS, . ; 25 " tokd 8IDES SHOULDERS 25 Firkins BUTTER, f f , 150 Tg8 Tud and Cafles LAJRD I , I 50 Bbla RICE, whole and broken,! ., ; . . 50 Boxes CRK AM CHEESE, j t . 250 ?bls 81IG'AB radea - s , ! . , OrtA Bbls and BozesCBACSBfiS I J "t)UV" and CAKES. 20 0 BOX68 TOBACCO sesj " , 150 Bbls POTijrora' ' ' 50 Bbls TTJKNIPS, 0 0 Blids Cnba and P. B. MOLASSBS, 50 Bbls N.O. MOLASSES "J j 1 150 BblS nd Half BhlB MACKEBEL, 3QQ Boxes SOAP, Candles, Ly Potash. Starch. Ac, . ForaaleatlowfUrares. ADRIAN YOLLERS. Fresh Arrivals. JRT SALT AND SMOKED SIDES, . , SUGAR-CURED HAMS, . CUBAIMOLASSXS, WHITB and MIXED COBN, MEAL, HA"? and OATS, , ALL GRADES COFFEE and SUGAR, ' PUR STANDARD BRANDS FLOUR, 1 0BACCO, SNUFF and CIQABS, ' "' ,HOOP-ntON,GLTJiandNAD18. , i llriSOtf' HALL'A PTtAT?HATT, ( HofeRoom. ; I Tnv ffi8115? m ANNOUNCING TO MY flP friends and patrons, both in the City dCoa111 that, pwlnitto the arrowthot my bnslnea". I found it necessary to enlarire my ui-on8uently' 1 hae taken dowa Se partlUon. and now occupy the whole of Oiesna clous store next to theinotlraKms Co "'STJtwV?1164- HespectfnUyT' auUDAWtf ; J. B, MARSHALL. n : u I J u blJSU U1TF1U1S, Aug. 15, 4 P M. SPIRITS TURPENTINE The market was quoted firm at 32 cents per gallon," with sales reported later of 200 casks at that price. r - ROSIN The: market, waa quoted firm at 87i cents Tor-Strained; and 90 cents for Oood Strained, with no sales reported. TAR The- market ? was quoted ffrm'ar fl 80 per bbl. of 280 lbs.;' with ; sales?at quotations; ; i . v . ' ; v . . CRUDE TURPENTINE-Market steady' at $1 75 for Soft and ,$1 10 for Hard, with sales at quotations; ' '. . ' , i ' COTTON The "market was ! quoted quiet, with - no sales reported; The I .fol lowing were the official quotations ' ' Ordinary. . . . .... ; . .7i r-.v cente 1$, lb, Good Ordinary....... 9 ..-. Low Middling.;;.;,: 94 s " 1 " "Vf ilin cr . -1ft I itt uooa juannng ..iu ' , RICE Market steady : and unchanged.' 1 We quote: Rough:1 Upland $1 001 10 Tidewater $1 151 80. Clean: Common 4i4f cents; Fair 4f5i cente; Good 5 5 cents; Prime5S cents; Choice 6 6i cents per pound. ' 1 '' ; , . , TIMBER Market quiet, with ales as follows; Prime and Extra . Shipping, first class heart,- $9 0010 00 per M. feet j Extra Millijgoo he5rt,! $6 ' 508 00 Mill Prime, 6 .6o6 60; Good Common Mill, $4 O0 5 00; Inferior to Ordinary, $3 604 00, 1 . . T r. 1 IT" n . " '..1 1 ; : i;-:,5 RECEIITN. - , r p; 1 t- OOttOn . . . . .-4 '.i.oi.rm -. - . Spirits Turpentine. . . Rosin. . . . ; . . . ; . . ..... . . , . . Tar.... ....iV....... ....... Crude Turpentine, r. ........ , u bales 213 casks 1,007 bbls 55 bbls .139" bbls D09IESTIO MARKETS ' Financial. iBy Telejrraph to the Morning; Star. . Nkw York, Aug 15,; Noon. Money easy at 1 percent.- Sterling exchange 485 and 486. . State bonds dull but steady. Governments quiet and steady. , . , CommerciaX. . " - , Ctitton quiet, with; sales reported of 524 bales; middling Uplands 10 7-16c;middling Orleans 10 '9-16c. t - Futures steady,5 with sales at the following quotations: August 10.82c; September 9.93c;. October 9.64c; November 9.57c; December 9.59c; January 9.67c Flour dull and heavy. Wheat lower and heavy. Corn " lowers Pork dull at $11 0011 , 25. " Lard heavy ; at f 6 57i. Spirits turpentine steady at 35ic. Rosin steady at $1 121 20." Freights steady. Baltimokb, Aug. 15. Flour firm and in fairly active demand; Howard street? and western super $3 004 40; xtra $3 i50 4 25; family 4 355 25; city mills super $3 25 3 50; extra $3 T54 OOf Rio brands $4 905 00, WheatHsouthern lower; and active;-western lower., closing easy; south ern red 9495c ;sou them amber 95c$l 00; No. 1 Maryland 93jebid;'No. 2 western - winter red on : spot 92i92o. Corn southern dull and easy; western, lower and dull; southern white 5657c; do yellow 55c. - - " " !' ' ; " ' POREIGMARKirri. IBy Cablo to the Moraine Star.t ; . . LivKRpooL. ? Aug. ; 15, Noon.-Cotton flat, with prices somewhat: irregular; quo tations of all American cotton have de clined 1-1 6d; middling, uplands 5d; mid dling Orleans 5 916di sales 5,000 bales, of which: 500 were for apeculation and lex- port ; receipts 8.000 bales : American none. Futures flat; upland, 1 m c, August and September delivery 5 30T64529-64d; September and October delivery 5 29-64 5 27-64d; October and November delivery 5 24-645 23-64d ;November and December delivery 5 22-64d ; December: and January delivery 5 23-645 22-64d ; January and February 5 24-64d; February and March delivery 5 28-64d; March and April deliv ery 5 29-645 28-64d."- 1 : ' - 1 . ; ; Spirits turpentine 26s 6d. ; s -4 ' j 1 P. M. Uplands, 1 ro c, August 'de livery 5 80-64d, sellers' option; August and September delivery 5 8Q-64dVf sellers' Op tion; September ..and: October delivery 5 28-64d, sellers option; October and Novem ber delivery 5 24-64d, buyers', option ; No vember and December delivery 5 23-64d,i' buyers' option; December and January de livery 5 23-64d, buyers' option ; January and February delivery, 5 25-64d, sellers' option; February ' and ''March delivery 5 27-64d, sellers' option;' March and April delivery 5 80-64d, sellers' bption. ; Futures closed steady; . : v '. . : ; Sales of cotton to-day include 4,4X0 bales :AmericaiL'ii f ?' -' f Lohtjdk,- Aug.-15, N6bn.-ConsolaT 100 1-16. .fr.t$'i2r-i'Z -.-14 U - Never too I.mte to' KTend. When the system is" so , badly run down' wuatiiis uKeanoia ooot wnicn nas Deen half-eoled and heeled . several times,' and mental shabbiness goes hand-in hand with physical debility then it might seem, too late to try recuperation. No, sir! Not as long as : you can get . a bottle of Brown's Iron Bitters at the druggist's for rjost one dollar." i r Sclooner Isaac L. Clart at Ancton. I DISTRICT COURT OP THE UNITED STATES, for the District of Cape Fear in the Eastern District of North Carolina. s - , .. ' The Insurance Company of Ndrth America, ! .- - against -:' - - i ; The Schooner Isaac L. Clark. A o ;V ' By virtue of a decree made in the above enti tled cause, the undersigned will expose for sale, at public auction, for cash, onlhursday, the 20th day Ot AnaruBt. 188&. at 18 M.. at the fchio-vard of S. WSkioner, in the City of Wilmington, in said.. xHsinoc, an ana Binjrmar tne scnoone Isaac Li CLARE, as she now lies on the Railway at said Ship-yard, tojretner with the Taokle, Apparel and Furniture of said Vessel, whether the same be on board of said Schooner, in said Ship-yard, In a warenouse or warehouses,or elsewhere In said Oity. JOSHUA B, BILL. . an H tds U.8.MarshaL The Biblical Recorder PUBLISHED BY- i!' Edwards, tlroughtort &. Co. RALTCTGHlC'a ,; - ; REV. C. T; BAILBTZ, Editor. . , . RET. C. S. FARRISS, 1 "! ' .. ; . Associates. CHAS. L. SMITH,-. ) ' - . Organ of ;Hortli " Carolliia s Baptists In 1U 44th. Year. KVERY B APTISTSHOTJLD TAKE IT As an Advertising Medium Unsurpassed. Only $3.00 Per Year. ; ' Addren dofX8tf BD3LICALBBCORDEB. RaleUrh. N. a The Central Protestant A WEEKLY RELIQIOra AND FAMILY NEWS paper and the Orfran cf the Methodist Protest taut Church in North Carolina, -is published at Greensboro, N. C . , , . . Terms. $2 oo per annum, in advanea. ' ' . The eligibility of its location, the number and activity of Its agents, and the constantly increas ing demand for it among the more solid classes of readers in various sections, give the CENTRAL PROTESTANT peculiar claims upon the patron age of the advertising public Terms very favor able. : Consult your business Interest, and address the. editor:.., , -: ... v , ,- - tT. :. ' .-. J. L. MIC3AUX r ': Sreenaboro N. C ' Indigestion Cur . I suffered tnr mn. . iestion, scarcely able to IfJ! Wtb on my stomach. Tfae hnrS iaesiWt r most intolerable, an" L! consequently moreen iOM - 0aIdEo - tvuu, tuure cr lew n Pression attendant 'he aword.IwasmWov,. ..'WedLi.. c- relief in anything else I I Swift's specific I be an the Tne medicine toned np the sZ Ve at ened the digests 6 smk tbJ Bingceased, and l' ficulty.- Now my health u loT anythtog in the shape of food and ca m out the slightest suffering as I was, and I am readilyhealed. Take the pre8JCatl eating, Instead of before lbd f '. "Ames Mann . , At?anta. (3a , May 13, 15. ' Su 1 - f "Free from Mala ria. in the fall of 1884 I waa ti and my energy gone nL io Was shatiS swell. iLr,n t k.r?:. -My lega aod fJri H M-hWAW Ml .iiouu auviaea me to try Swift 's q 'M. 1 cured three bottles and commit Splfio- I pm sweUiog soon subsided ?H ? tt lts n'e Tb bottta. which have made ZJ the C leeiiucea newmaa to-day Thl,r CUre.Mii moremeiitorlona mediciae" offPt.leHn.fcVer humanity. It has wroughtVoS f0r - Leesbnrg Lee County, Qa, & For sale by all druggists UseonxaoodandSKln THB SWTPT SPECIFIC CO 157 W. 23d St.. N Y WM 3' Ml,k janaO-DAWlv "frsuwe n TUTT 25 YEARS Tne Greatest Medical Triumph of the Age! SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Pain nader the ,Un blade Fullness after catinc, withadiL tnclinatian to exertion of body ormim -Imtabllttyof temper, Low spirits, win' -afeeliagcf having neglected someistr. Weariness, Dizziness, Flattering at lio Heart, Dota before the eyes, IIeadac right eye, Restlessness, witi txal dreams, Highly colored Urine, act .CONSTIPATION. TtJTT'S PIIXS are especially adapteJ to such cases, one dose effects such & change of feeling as to astonish the sufferer. They Increase the Appetite, and cause tin body to Take on Flesbithus the system Is nourished, and by their Tonic Action on the DleestlveOrcans.BesolarStoolsaxs prodncgdJPrlce 35c. 44 Mnrray St..K.Y. TUTT'S EXTRACT SJlfiSAPARILU Renovates the body, makes healthy flesh, strengthens the weak, repairs the wastes of the system with pure blood and hard muse!; tones the nervous system, invigorates thb brain, and imparts the vigor cf manhood, $ 1 Sold by druggists. OFFICE 44 Murray St., Now York Jan 30 D&W ly an we fr Jan 3 WJH nm-ffVf!i.- RLC60. r?ea- ate tiie LIVER anu KIUtVS tiiid RKSTOUK 1'lS ESAL'H. and VIGOR c? Y0T?m Br nensia. VVastC''Jr.BC!iii B dieestion. J.ack of SisenyJi, o&fi iireu eei :t-uuiwT nerves reccna lailivens mmu sua D SntTcrinlro::! comprint; ...nlrtn Jii.-iirSCHiil ipeedy eure. Gives a dear, hiil.y cP'SS ifrequeut attempts w. tfflp ta thnnnularlrvf the u i-'inai awnl getllie Orwdiai. avi i . . , Sena your cddrsMtoThr il-f Sil auglSD&Wly an it Bank of Hew Hanover, Authorized Capital, - - $1,000,000 CaahCftBitalBaidiiL - $300,000 Surplus Fund, - $50,000 DIRECTORS : W.LGOBB, C. M. STKDMAS- . f : GL W. WILLIAMS, ISAAC BATES. DONALD MacRAS, JAS. A. A "H. TOLLERS, RHBINSTJa' ; . B. R. KUDGSKS, B. BOBD' J. W ATKINSON. . ; j v . , .. ISAAC BATES, President , U G.W. WTLLIA1IS, Vice PresMeut , . an tf , & D. WAIJCBaW lOKCHANTS. BANKERS & MANUFACTPKEB8 ii'Z SHOULD READ BRADSTREET'S, A WTJEKET-TOTrfiNAL OF TRADE, TRX&k , AND PUBLIC ECONOMY. Sixteen Pagesevery Saturday. Oftentimes Tren '' ty Pages. Sometimes Twenty-four Pages ' 2nVE DOLLARS A YEAH.: The fwmost purpoeeof BBABsrrBKT r TAt.i9.l nervioe to business men. K.nme Utoha throughout tne ariA and Canada, and the arie8C,?totioB P' ihiiitiA. ara alone worth the subscriPoD mtaes, are aiouo wwm ("7n are eiceeu Rvnses of recent legal decisions i are e ,B Ingly valuable. As wmmerclaa irad the wider sense, are oominp to be mowa conducted on a statistical Basis, the rrn contained In Bjunerararr's is of the w Its pontameain bu"?"m met. tance Dotn to proaueen uu throw"- rinBdaisreporieu Telegraph to Bkadstekk's np ro pnoncation. fe SIIIGLII 'COPIES, TEN CENTS- i ded Atkinson & Hanning8 " ' " Insurance Rooms, f ; milS NORTH WATER STREET. - xfituxlattoB, N. fi. m i ' Tnted Over Jl1 w,i tifo nmnnaii ,VO VttllMhvl. va PBLLS IN USF MiHil 11 -. .m trade and Industrial reports: its weew , it Kan lrrn ntni ea
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 16, 1885, edition 1
2
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