Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Sept. 16, 1885, edition 1 / Page 2
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i -, - ' . V. r'; 11 ) (i !! A. : r r THIS XORNlNG STAB, the oldest "dally new ape in North Carolina, la published daily, exaBpl r ! onday, at $7 00 per year, $4 00 for alx months, A 2 00 for three months, $1.50 for two months; 75e. : tor one month, to mall subscribers. Delivered to fUy subscribers at the rate of 15 oenta per week :,. ix'T any period from one week to one year. , Til S WEEKLY STAB is piibHahed erery Mday teoniing at $1 SO per year, $1 00 for six months M , .ents for three months, -i i ; - : w-' ' - ' . - ADVEBTISIWamira (DAILT).-e Bovttare sne dayr $1 00 ; two days, $1 75 j three days, $250 , V . four days, $3 00 five days, $3 50 1 one week, $4 00, j iwo weeks, $6 60 : three weeks $3 50 ; one nonffl, ; F10 00; two months, $1? 00 three monthg, $24 00 ; 1x months, $40 00; twelve months, $60 00. Ten . tnes of solid Nonpareil type makeonesgprr;"4? Si.:, All unnomioAmftntd of Tali Festivals Bailr- Hnnn. Pfn-Nlno. flnn1flfcv,VetlnM. Political Meet nglwWbVc Wnt.tnM iradfil lmaA nf rflfc Ttfima" 80 Cents I lino for flnt insertion: uid 15 cents per line for .-.tnh subsequent insertion.' : - - rv -V- Mo advertisements inserted hi'Looal Column, at Any price. .i -'. . - -f .Advertisements inserted once a week in Dally f will be charged $1 00 per square for each Insertion. ,v Svery other day, three fourths of dally rate. - Twice a week, two thirds of dally rate, i , An extra charge wffl be madefordoubleliiicn j -r triple-oolnma advertisements, -t . , Notices of Marriage or Death: Tribute of Be-. .1 spect, Resolutions of Thanks, are oharged ' sor as ordinary advertisements, but only half rates when paid for strictly in advance. At this rate : so cents will pay for a simpler announcement or : Marriage or Death. -V:, : ;i.V ? . ,. . Advertisements to follow reading matter; or to ' occupy any special place, will be charged extra according to the position desired , - ..- C -Advertisements on which no 'specified number -rf insertions is marked will be continued :tul for K bid," at the option of the publisher, and charged . np to the data of discontinuance. . ; : ; . tt Advertisements dl8Cont3nuedbefor -the tone t ontracted for has expired, charged transient ates for time actually published. -, t ,J- Advertisements kept under the bead of j"New - Advertisementsn wfll be charged ity per cent. SXtn. . , :..;V; - . - -. - -; j , . Amnsement, Auction and Official advertlsementi --ne dollar per square for each insertion. . s AH announcements and recommendations of : aandidates for office, whetber tn tu snape oi communications or otherwise, will be charged at advertisements, - . i., . ' - - t - Pavments for transient advertisements must be ' , made in advance. Known parties, or Strang er wlth proper reference, may pay monthly orouar- V terry aoooramc to oontracs. : j , ; : , . -i "vhi.Kt .um wm nsf iia .nAtnid to eZa caed their space or advertise ?r tnmg foreign to ' ' their regular business- wttaous extra caarge at v transient rates - ..-j, ; ; ftomlitan' must DO' made by Cneok, Draft. jt-.uo y Order,' Sxpreas, or In Registered stter. , Only such remittances will be at the -Letter. r risk of the pi Communications, unless they contain tmpor tantnews, - oireai able in every outer way, tnev will invariably be -elected If the real name of the author is withheld, Advertisers should always specify the Issue or . . ssues they desire to advertise In. - Where so is . : sue is named the advertisement wBl be inserted , - n the Dally. Where an advertiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him during the time Us advertisement is In, the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his ad The Morninp; Star. : By riI,UAJn K. BEBNABD, . - WILMIKQTON, 1T.C Tuesday Evsmera. Sept. 15,3 1885. EVENING EDITION. ; ' . - DYNAMITE TALK IN NORTH CAR- C " C' I r V OLINA. As.-C ' - '. - It looks as if Durham : would have Wa taste of labor troubles before long if we may judge by an article copied into the Daily , Heporter from "the- -'-' Chicago Alarm, a paper we had "never lieard'of before. The article would fill a column and a half of the . Stab and is headed'Oppfession ' - Wage-Slavery - in - Durham, 'North . : Carolina." The article is very bitter a and seems loaded with dynamite, j It . emanates from some of those import ed laborers that have been employed - in the factories. ; We "dot not know i any thing of the purposes, of the -Durham Knights of Labor, but we r-: do know that the tone of the article sentto Chicago is ominous and there - is cause to - fear trouble in the near ' future. Here, for instance, is a pas- 8 age that is intended to mean a great : dealor to be an alarm signal without meaning much: I - 1 "And I can gladly state to ;you that we are already realizing the fruits . of our la bor, as every new issue of the Alarm is . anxiously waited for, and gladly received , by the workmen, and after read, handed from one to another until hundreds have read it. We have spread a portion of the , Sewlta, and I can assure you that the work men of this town will not be the last to ap pear ' at their posts when the Tocsin is sounded for the Social Revolution." ' We are pained to see in staid, hon- - -est, law-abiding North Carolina such a wild, savage threat as that. Social ' Revolution t What does; h& sneak? "t - Does he not know . that from j imme morial time, there, have been grades , in society . and hat ; there will be grades? until-the end t comes? Does : he not know that among the millions of laborers the world over there ate d istinctions and classes? , But heir ims . Jlnight of ;Laborfarther, le says to his feUpwrworkingmen: W I -Jrne way we are worked is cnnal tn ih slaveTof-Siberla, not allowed so rauch as one evening iu the week to see our com rades and exchange thoughts and; words concerning our condition and forV5ur nro tection." .: : : - - : - . . v Why not go back to the North or -to Europe, U.thatboybur foriginal home, ifi . you are dissatisfied .with ,tho wages, paid you at Durham? North Carolina ? is at. peace. with all the world. ; Our people of all classes. and conditions do not favorviolence or riots orv'revolutionary'Yproce6l ings of nj kindtXur SUte isidl . vancing on the high-way of "prosper ity. " Wages!, pejftars sareias good here as "any whrSlilf they are bt : then the few hundreds of Northern laborers now in' the State would df well to return ;jto theirormerjiomei and let our people Beundisturbed'by threats andtincenaryall4 ; writer: in the tdMance f4ras' thil picture, and it doeit iplyt6:th4 , South' much . however . it may t apply to the North; He sayf ' hnnJSfi joor kittle dwarfed care?nfn' snd mailings ; of yonr care-worn wife answer nn S ivi; "ona, and the trtJt Emes "mr thTSlffS it true? i llisery and want oa cne hand, : pleasure and plenty on the other.' Can any one say that at present there are no kings in our land? - . The wealthy -men : of North Caro una are not uucerous. There is not a miUionaije in the SCateariditi;is not certain tnat inerejjs onewortn .a half-milHon.;. Splendid palaces in the tt:-t--!"-v'rr t? - - 1 - . j,, . " .f . , a tV.I ... iA,j Inon tit turn hnnHpul y--'. .... - - .6 , v i " ji dav in North Carolina than they are A ri-vrfcilL p 'ti i .t. . i v "? " s-i " !a tiomsttbe heard once norel and if - 4 -' v -nnn nova soon- nnrthinrr. riam An I. J1 , . -' - '..I: nhnrnnD anil Iitm1 than t.llftT. mitailA nf r , . , - dime 'novel then you have ; ma.L-v.w ?7i'r-r..r;-.: : T . r, . "If is to us, the toiler, that this; land, with all of its wealth.' happiness and plea sure, belong, and. not to the idler.i So arise, and like courageous, -free-horn men claim and proclaim it as youf own. But how can we claim ' and proclaim . it as -our own ? r There is pnly one way to emancipate our selves, tnat way is tnrougn revolt ana atom to our enenae.u Jnrom tne graves of our ene m A 77 -&iijJA 7siAk am1 rtanninoce fr 11 prevail. But it would be imprudent on our part to revolt unarmed,, and to arm our - . - -:. : ,ii j. - x ? 4 iT Is this Russia?, Is this Roland of Nihilism ? - This i indeed strange talk foriNorth Carolina. If immigra - tion brings this sort of fruit then we must uo wnnoui ic. ai grananism and Nihilism are to be the resultants of bringing in workers from the North with their wild and absurd and santanic ideas of revolution and destruction and death then let us have no more such mischievous emis saries scattering the dragon's teeth of discord in the vain hope that, like the teeth of tadmoa, armed men may spring therefrom. jYe repeat, we deeply regret to see such ideas and threats going out from a State that has been conspicuous for its good or der, for the general contentment of the people and for the entire absence of those isms and nuisances that have cursed other States and other coun- Such ideas and' threats will not take root in North CarblinasoiL The laboring classes of this State are not fools and fanatics." They know that labor the sweat of the face-is ap pointed unto most of the children of men, and that to destroy property and kill the prosperous means an archy and ruin and death and misery and degradation and poverty without employment. ; . ' v. , . y ; If .y The Star would not favor oppress ing laboring people any more than it would favor murdering all who have accumulated property and distrib utmg it among those who have none. Divide up the whole wealth of the country equally among the people and before night there would be in equality again, for some would get from the others. The writer of this' calls himself a laboring man in its true sense, for he works every day in the year for his living, and works sick or well. He . can only . wish j peace, plenty, contentment to all who labor aad wait. " ' j ; EDITOR STEADts CASE. . The persons who' are ' after Mr. Stead, the editor ; of the JPall Mall Gazette, may overdo the thing. He as I 8dmes all the responsibility in the il-1 Will fTfnlnotj oil inA.nAJ fTtillLl i t'-. , ' ' " ; -- --- -r wuuCU. a mo i Philadelphia American says: . . J Should beisatisfvfclmsiif tK.t iU I prosecution is actuated br other motives I tnan adesire to secure Justice to an injured rnotter, and is acting to secure London sbr ciety its revenge, he may prove ra rather ugly customer. , He must have in his hands evidence of a kind much more damaging I than any f his disclosures, thus: far, aad.l of it." -...; ": : n" f rp. ' .,' ' . , - I - The excitement; throagh6ut Eng. land IS Said tO. b VP.rv trTMt. r Ktana dealers are unable to supply the de- I mand for papers containing the trial. a -; ' i - a t. '"t 4 ' A special fo -the New Tbrk Times anon .nnta;n;. I t - r- . -I rrom lnaon, dated 12 tb, says: - i , ' 'Almost all the religious organs suDDort I uuu Bixuuiy ; or, ii oisagreeing witn some pf his methods, they point out bitter-, u-& no desire to, attack- the .perpetrators of n Mrs. Jarrett and Prof Stuart have both beenIn Prance securing i evidence. ' Mr. fled ao far h t" ' . Vu,1. I - - r'vs ui tue vase. . t tV Ka,o ' ' I It begins to look as if it was a pt -r w vifio u.uu4ue8uonea in- flnence of Mr; .Stead, who f a'eems to be a Very mcuriai; bold confident caliche w gmlty, butt the proof elicited thus far bythe -prosecution goes to prove, it strikes ns, thaY the mother of the rirl t M aelfareSvthy girl admitted that'afie told 'what her ;mptterjhad nstructedherio savl whilst the. mother Vasf arretted on the night of the alleged f abdnction for being drunk and disorderly in the street. There - ig intense JIB impriotbaSteadwill-be ',:ir.A - This will make the excitement the classes most interested to the centre. Every body in England "knows that Stead is tthe, exposer of- the. crimes perpetrated against the daughters of I tthe middle and lower classes, and j tJiat his punishment. means Jaeffort i k Dreasi nim aown, jiesiroy nw in- I flaence, and shut hismouth. 1 V - rTSAt-lastrihe"peopie-jof iSpaintare L able to fiuos praises to God for the T - . . -r . T . .. . . " . : , I onofcmctit nr tha a ajfnl onnnriu that- I nearly one hundred thousand victims- I - -' sTti-jiv- -: - i-- l to deatb... It has indeed. been a fear I a epidemic; and itsr dimensions are ' r : ; :r i jbliu sumcienwy great io excue i ooj.n 1 .-s --- . " . ; , . i ;; - rfe"ar and sympathy. Is this season I .. . . .-. . - - I -at hnlotn ? -f .r hs 4 1i a laatrv mill if i vutriu ubuci vumuca iiuAt, year m u nas - ior we; past two '.years r Gibbon, i in his immortal ,work; that has no rival, tells us that in the, time of Justinian a plague spread over all "Europe after originating in 'Africa, auu iHtcu lui uiuiu tuau DUbv yuait, if our memory Js not at fault, j We J remember he says that from 5,000 to 1 o7ooo persons some times 'died in a day in Constantinople, the then. cap ital of the Rbman Empire." S &,-m - - r - -. ; 1 W e have read what our neighbor, j the iSresbyteriant said of our para- i grapn aooocine operation ox toe a- quor law in Texas. The Star,' like a ? live newspaper, merely noted the threatened deficit in the Treasury to show how in one Southern State the law had operated f so as ; to diminish the revenue. . Our neighbor is cor rect in not attributing; to ns a pur- J pose i to oppose a liquor law;because I it would erf ate a deficit. iThe Stab I opposed prohibition, but it has' favor I ed a liquor law, but not to the point of inhibition, but to tax luxuries for the benefit of the State. Will the Stab please publish the official number of Interments in Wilmington for the period covered by our report 7 New Berne Journal. - - There were 128 deaths in Wilming ton in the months of May, June, July and August, exclusive of still-born. This would make the death rate 19.4 for the year in every 1,000 inhabi tants, upon a basis of 20,000. It would be 384 for a year. The New Berne interments, as reported, were 81. How many of these died else-: where or were still-born we do not know. " . " . We print in this issue a letter writ ten by a little" girl of this city, who is now in Western North Carolina. For. a correspondent of her age, the work is well done. . . CURRENT. COMMENT. Mr. Sherman would deprjve the freed citizens of 'the South, of. their political status because of the alleged iniquities of the Southern white men. He gravely declares that the votes of negroes are not counted, and mentions Virginia as one of the btates of - which this ? is true. Hia statement is simply infamous. This is strong -language, ; but it is fully justified, for he knows that this State has to-day two RepublicansMahone and Riddleberger in the Senate of mo v.uiwju giawa. - xxe Knows,; Loat Ihe votes of the colored men of ;V$r. iiuia uou u ue reueivea ana countea before this coold haDDett. He is a?nno'e war that John S. Wise uaye. . naa ooiorea .votes coanted in their favor; and his assertion is shown be f"6 by the record, which, no ?nflf kno8 better . than, he does. . Bht "is false witness, vile and malignant jU hisntention is, Jxan do no harm at thia late d&r Norfolk TuJn i0?- TfaU6 landmark, - r v-'ivi; i---. If Mrf Parneli hopes to make p.uMJuuv fcarin: ne is not only appiy- g to Ireland a policy which has failed disastrously ii the great United Stat.eo ; vWa nvAt MfU r- V.L fore'gner means comparatively little to t &st . is. .the i continent within Zi?x???r . the ,c which there is perf e but he applying it" ecil free -traded rri"j6 "swat iiuwi. nn poor oountryi m jvhichany blunder ?Iinat fcma wilt speedily take effect " fcmu1' " .jamine; j? irsc rent asunder by .home rale,- and then her- ' h ti VAJ-t ' protection; Ireland wowa-inaeea soon rne the blighting influence of Mr. Parnell's ascendency; -"V? BpZQSaWT. eoie v . vaoie'g stock of misinformation on the negro question ;mue ppuwrw aDoatas large as what doesp't kno w about Creoles;: Nei- cOuld : be transported on . the Pnritanical person-a physiological mwtake,, He should have been born m ne,gnborhood of Cape Cod, 8,ammean?naliZ at the base where people's veins are filled with - !5Stead of turnip-jQiCe.-Zoizl :?Mt .i- s .-it ACTIVITY' IN TRADE. " Commercial Bulletin, Sept 12, .c ine week baa been an active gratifying, evidences of decided impoved. feeling, in. the:-leading ihe advances. Thl; :hlve:tf:announcement uvviTiijV lu mo nvv - uauou i mere! ia "nmp.li . improvsu. From the-Souih and West, also, there p. .ami piymg maications iu, ? oistriDutiug irade in those sections set is toronceu witn ; retail Duvers from ill IZfS anmo T V "SW in its.historv. - This is . a very sign fioant fact.' , Other local jobbers re port" an unusuallv "brisk demand for falP and winter ffoods. 1 THE KKir hta r Vat VJiRn- JOLJajJA a rr -a . ...-.: New York Herald. 1 ft London, iSept jllAstrbnomors have for tha firat tim irtstha hiatnrV -Ifr' ! ipwtwme itt tne history, ulxue wna 1MSiea!. ine pirtn oi new member, of. oar steller system; r VWrk ttJ?.L I Dr. Harting, of the Dorpat. Universe ty Observatory in Russia, is the god- father of ? this; by t no means little' stranger, which may be thirty mil lion times larger than f our sun and which by its mere birth threatens to upset many, of our ,most cherished astronomioal theories. 5 ' The nebula of Andromeda is the mother " of the new star.O Between 9 and' 10 o'clock "on any clear evening me newjyroorn may be found m the eastern sky, well up from1 the hon- zon, as a glowing point jyf the eighth magnitude, surrounded by the cloud like mist of the nebula from which it sprang. A good pair of opera glasses will clearly show both the nebula and and star.-" : 1 ' 1 : , Our. widwife astronomers are'- now bard ; at -work 1 measuring,, weighing and gossiping about the .unexpected youngster, which has given them no cause for, complaint as regards either growth or ability to make a noise in the world.' . On August 10 the nebula was carefully scanned, but not ithe slighest signs of s change were ob- servea. " The nebula, according to a photograph then taken, remained in its ordinary condition of a gigantio agglomeration or- faintly -glowing star mist, Jn which the most nnwpr- ful .telescopes could,, distinguish nothing except a faintly defined nucleus. 5 On August 19 the new star was seen as a brilliant point near the nu cleus, but the great importance of the discovery was not appreciated until this week Since -Its - sudden birth the star has given constant cause for astronomical gossip on account of its irrnmiixr nQnira . na vmi w . n ' changed its position ; in rthe sky by ten seconds in one direction and two seconds in the other, but it also shines with an unsteady, flickeriner. orance- Iike light new to members of the staid star family. " 1 OUR STATE CONTEMPORARIES. The colleges, almost without exepntinn not excluding the Universiiy. are bidding for unnre Dared bov colleges stoopiog to', little catch-nennv type-wrninff , courses.' takinir hnv ttA teach them the multiplication table nrft con over their a-b abs. The result is to make conrusioa worse confounded. , There is no grading our sch&ols. Some of our Stale colleges are jjot nearly -ao good as some of our high schools. Tbe result is. Anr nmnlA tu '11., w rrn i ...w an ak so. v Auere is no More; the high schools should .combine to wuuuuiu meir inuuencerom our Univers ity and from our colleges if they have pre- Keu uunng the week, with a maricea. ALL FABT3 OP THE T70ELDP WIL MiN aToFwT advance in prices, and a large num- n . , .r- ;, - . MARKET ber.ofTmanafacturers EtiU in the mar- xtlE SQ VTJIERN RAlZRolttiS TJsTAnvvtr r . ke ;wdollendal the JJ A mm superiorsound to the word College. r The I cIrtkidgjb BLiTtTimyWKauo or wtubre 1 mber deUvery 5 17-64d, buyers' op- GOXF STREAM iactlstnatno COlleeeoUffht tn h -nntmn- I wanted, free bv mall- nr I will . mamn I tion: "December and Jannarv rllivorv t R I ized that has a nrenaratorv i4rrtm..t I BSLT loeether for 80 oents. I 18-fi4d. DflllAm' nntinn. .Tnnon vk I ' paratorydeparlments. As It Is, the high I H APT TA'MTJnTTa'P i I - 8eHers' option ; April and May de- schools will have to extend their courses of J tvi-i vJlN - HlJ U oili, I Uvery 528-64d. value. Futures closed bare studies and come in competition with the 1," " - - ) colleges if they are to ,be antagonized by r"" ""rcs " " wb a-eep our ooys longer if the colleges force us to doit Oa Leaf.: Men may cease to trade, but they must and will eat. Bills of exchange may prove valueless, but the garnered harvest will still have a value. . , The ahip may rot in the harbor, but the nlow will still tn , furrow.?-Nature ia never bankrupt. What- crcr cioc iu.ua, s Be wui remain solvent. The dews and rains of heaven wfll eyer fall 4UYiugiy ui ? upon the earth's bosom and the I arrow, of light descend from the Sun's ei- I uuuBuesa quiver. ene wfll never fail lo bring forth Vcorn and wine" to make irlad the heart of man. Thievea may break In and steal bill and bond, but the farm is not the subject of larceny. ffjfca&tt City Carolinian.-r, r;-,. -.-w..'. j POLITICAL P01JHT8J. , j J Damn the bloodv I'uhirt.Z.'T. v- yiHUrtcrciut jietegram, Jsep. j ijaoor nas assumed resnonaihili. ties from which It cannot " ipjtnanA. " witW lis new accretion of nnwpf Uhnr ha,inti0 as well as -riirhtfftordefen(L Me! Leaoer . -t-n sivi-''; uiii 41 i . . Senator Sherman mkv hit biW enough, ta paint; the entire Statei of Ohio red and yet find that his stock, of paint Is not large enough for doing the same thine for the whole eonntrvPX,7 tvu-rr About the last.' Jaod speculators and monopolists wanted .iT exico vas ?0J-ge-,W., Jul ian. ifOr thatverv reason 4ti that the President appointed him Surveyor t v wnwy; Francisco , Ubarle8 Dadlev; Wn iouuu mat, mere is no opposition South to necro edncation mM , len we con- sider that it has hot been a year since the loot PfOfifrlanffal 2 l - T . how many indications aavancert ideas a South by unprej ud. vurrenz., , ' Tti. .ai- . ;' I 1 be adVOCates of o-nld ra oa a I rnl-vsi. -. I romjhe standpoint bf Joans or value.' The silver .advocates are the debtor class, whd I must pay. They natuavlly, want the return made in'what will costthiiri i0.0t-"H,iMv1 1 aaded to irold.' inerea , hKil 1 . Awuaw - kMITbid and an rhptneng it. I V -' V QUL-U1J m -Phil ruW ' 2,-l-waamTWww.-j- I T ? l n MM w - . -i " . . r other, triumphal'1 tour-tl She must' have an ezatti lor she hag few. other niialiti.- tw . Lm. an it is remarKania i i. v r i- -k x r ' . u j d ri t rnn- v. . u . i k. of the nretalenceof ch as. EDwABD WILSON, Editor andJProWl 1 .ffrz Y?J'y.tS'A& UIjIJVA ra'lA?.!' tnnA tm 4Ui IMKMm(--L 1. i t-te i I. ?... i m. - I I ' "y I r.' " - - r ABUis YILLE, N. C. ; ' - - i I kT T.""BD "i" ""Jreaaingcircuianon m tne I iced nhoprvAra fThiMnA I , - ... .;.Sr . .. , .! I heart of the Pe n mimfn tuivu.. I -w Torror ettiina- the Heeeat Bier Twl f v . - I TO svcu twiwriug rates, ana seuime tweeHftHftlxwustille as Nashville the East i t : VAfmTTeiTrK . ,1 f?ZrMm:lrtl-; ; 1 M,r leUSn Considered by be O?: to the Komm, star.l -.' . i j ... ...nutva. kicuKiuiutir 1U.& meet- I ine jof the Cabinet vu hM which all of the members-were present ex - SS r8tood that the BUverr policy of the Govern- I ment was one of the questions considered. a f; The President today aDnointed James. - 1 tKced to be postmaster at Corinth; Miss, I . - . - -j-- T? j . ' ' i io UlS 'RBlL. t Besplted Pending; Decision of Privy Council. , r - i ' i Br Telegraph to the Kornlne Star.1 1 WiNNirco, Man.; 8eJt l5. A dispatch from Kegina, MT. WJ, says Reil has been respited pending the decision ! of the' Privy Council of Great JJritain&-;54-i i fiO VTHERN -ITEMS. I Poor s hiffla ta ;nu,A - I many '.of them are,:, the rural people of the South arc ten limes more contented! and happy l h&n the nervous, "shifty,, highly civilized men and women of the Northern country. Augusta Chronicle. . ; , - ; There is not a paper in Georgia that would like to see the Railroad Com mission abolished. ' ; But we want to see the power of that Commission so abridged that it cannot cripple our railroads and keep new railroad capital out' of the1 State. Rotne Sentinel. ' , That was a good illustration of the negro's love of baptism, ' when an old colored Woman scrambled from a Florida stream, in which the preacher had just im - merged her. and exclaimed: "Bress de I Lawd; dat makes five times Tse been bap- I "cu- v- rrmg. PJBRSONAZ Archdeacon Farrar arrived ves- terday at Quebec - jurs. muuigan, who succeeds Ada Street in the Chicago. Pension office, is a native of Maryland and a woman of very stylish appearance. . ; - George W. -Cable is about mak ing his home at Northampton, Mass. I It seems that he doesn't find the sympathy in new urieans wmcu ma nature craves.- The trouble with Mr. Cable is that his opinions I wbch his productions are sold." Savannah, wciuMuugjcuumu ujr viio marKei in Ia Tnere Care for conanmptfon f . We answer unreservedly, yea! If the pa tient commecees in time the use of Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery." and exercises proper care. If allowed to run its course too long all medicine is power less to stay it. Dr. Pierce never decceives a patient by holding out a'falsehope for the sake of pecuniary gain. The "Golden Med cal Discovery" has cured thousand of nit I nta when nothing else seemed to avail. I Aur druggist has it Send two stamps for I Dr. Pierce's comnlete treatise on eonaumn I Wonrwitb numerous testimonials. Address I world's Dispensary Medical Association. I Buffalo, N. Y. ' I " ' : flo TITa a Aqtyi a Pqo I I VctllVaS 7aiHe BVLlL I TTOtfejeiwrs nr STAMPS I wai SEND TO I jp, "T address, postage paid, one canvas I GAlLK BA(4 mil Anmnlntn . .. i D iv -vr r v . JOHN D. BETHEL, Manufacturer of Snort - 2 xiuiifcuiif ixKHa ana anoes. Chambers St.. New York. ! jtenwon tnu papers seiast rH UNI OF WILMINGTON AND WELDON xtaurcnmesfjom WUmlngton. ., . . - : Table always well supplied with the best the country affords.. Rates of Board very reasoba ble, -i; .:t.;.- H. J. CARLTON, f SW A ASUU VV Ijl : rropnetor nOUUIUULW HUUli imiTUIiUflC Security Affalnst 'TtroT, j Tie Ml CaroMHome Instraiice Co. PHIS COMPANY CONTINUES TO WRTTB PO x. neies at fair rates on all classes of insurable PP?&iwith opnndenoe U tnsnrtrs of pro pert tu North Carolina. .-, -I Axenta in all parts of the State. JOHN GATLING, President. w. o. rituutosE, seoretan x-uijABiia twfjiB, sanemsoi. i- " ATJUNSON MANNTHO. AffAnfat. 1 epastf Wilmington, N. C ' The Blue Bidge Baptist. ORGAN OF . THE BAPTISIS OF i WESTERN vNORTH CAROLINA. -Aii' l . Jfeiil E. Carter, Editor & Proprietor. The best Advertlsinr Vnlinm i bound in laith. earnest in fenrk. nnnt i purpose. , r , . : T' ' Ift'M , STi 3!? '"afHENDERSON; -f " vvaju xiiuiUiC I Lectins; oi Keprennutlfi n n.w I, ; r - -ww-iJ2TheiHarkpt - Masn rw n HTi'a-a h:i . innrn n i . Tmi'VT W mini m a a. - vhwh w mmm V A. Ijlf i - YovaiT xtewsDaijeT. i ... i -The TRIBUNE will discuss with entire freedom I ePlPno lheJ.T? 8tates all nestipns of pnblio mteresiL " rreeaom It is a desirable, medii i x"" i puDiio interest. - ,- - InpoIiUos It will tuu.h rJT pare and simnl."" - t-'t-"""" tl ff J,'1?0 3 It Will ilaho. AOrlnnaTv .'H.t i.vn l''L . aalpusrr for the npbuHdhii ffiylSiSftJ&fiK1. peoiany for &e dev I Carolina, itwiili varied- resooroes of Western North &i . "v"i "R?8"? erve the eeteemnf1t,ofl-; I "i3iyj?eaun with all Subjeets In a fair and d1 I its oninmiu r. t." ciuuuiK irom . . w vtiuwu arum hhw tta a . 118 to mAtrfl Anil "w m unproTed Pow P-r';iI''f c-i I W " iaJiOSSTCIRCULATIONANITHB I i irAfi Am.'. ' I;wd-??otPaperwmbe--Peitvi.i wi. aovertising patronage pf anypaper i - i irii1 a"Kjaiiong snonld b &d1iwui Vv J w i """SW1 " ,ns counuesoi Jtoore, Lnim- i Tne . I THTB WPMTB wki imTx..".u.u,,..OOreS9eo tO I nnrliLTi1. TiladM ii.yv, T3(v jt VJi il: I j t,-j---vso -cv ; L,.-,6,t ' rllngto ,ln South Carolina, v! t , iuSiU '". 1 i ueo88tf - h3 quoted firm at 30f cents per Wallon. . .'r-'y1 casks ktthat ; - , atr85 cents for Strained and 87J ceufo i : p at jriiomoAM. x , - fP?W-8,with sa es at qd iwix me market .Was; s Quoted l ulul vxim eaies reported of J0 bales nn .basis of 9 "cents per a for Middling The following were the official quotations G(od Ordinary......;, 8 - f m I Middlino-i :. . ' ' n '" i -viiiixuK. ....... . n uin i - l13!00 'ddh.;i ; i ! 'i 9 3-16 " d RICK-Market steadv andiU I , -Upland J00 110; .Tidewater t $1 ism m : Clean- L Commob 44att nt. vaA annfi f, - ' Oo?d 5of cents: 5Pnme , cents: Choice 6i6i cents per fin TIMBERMarket steady, with saies as follows: Prime and Extra Shipping',! first class heart, $90010 00 per M. feet Ex tra Mill, good heart,- $6 508 00; ;Mill Prime, $6 008 50; Good Common iMill .$4 O05 00; Inferior to Ordinary. t3 00 J ; U--'-'f 1-' "i- - 1 ':: u .. 5 415 bales 136 casks 709 bbls . 49 bbls 74 bbls Cotton.... Bpirita Turpentine. . Kosin. : ... Tar..;.. . t;V; .V i ;y.V Crude Turpentine. .'. . . 1 1 ,t DOMESTIC RIA.RK.KTS. ' '. . : . '. ? s'- 5 "T-"-'- & - - . i tBy Telejjraph to the Morning Star.) t f ' Financial.- 1 : 1 Naw Yokk. " Sept. 15, ,Koon. Money quiet, firm aud easy at 1 per cent; Ster ling exchange 484 and 486. State bonds neglected. Governments active and strong. " Commercial. . V ' .Cotton firm, with sales "reported of -458 bales; middling uplands 10 l-16c; mid dlinff Orleans 10 3-16c Futures dull;salea at the following quotations: September w.ooc; uctooer .⁣ JNovember 9,49c; De cember 9;55c:- January 9.62c: J February 9.72c. Flour quiet and unchanged. Wheat- opened fc ninerana later fell back t nil . : . . - .l I lU-vCorn without 1 important change. Fork heavy at $10 00ai0 25. Lard steady at $6 421. Spirits turpentine dull at 33Jc Rosin $1 021 10.- Freights easy. Baltimobjs, Sept 15. Flour steady and active.- Wheat southern steady; western higher and active, closing quiet; southern red 9093c; southern-amber 9496c; No. 1 Maryland 9393ic; No. 2 western win ter red on spot 87ia88ic for fresh. - Corn southern steady and firm ; western higher I and quiet; southern white 5455c: yellow I wa?cmju, . FOREIGNIIABKETS. fBr Cable to the Morn Ins Star. 1 Livxrpool. Sept 14, Noonl Cotton steady, with fair demand ; middling uplands 5 7-1 6d;, middling Orleans ;5id; sales of 8.000 bales, of which 1,000 were for specu lation and. export; receipts 2.000 bales, of wncn i.iuu were American. Futures steady; uplands, 1 m c," September deliv ery o Z4-U4a; September and October de livery 5 21-64d; October and Kovember delivery 5 19-64d; November and Decem ber delivery 5 lbv64d: December and Jan. uary delivery 5 18-645 19-64d; January and February delivery 20-64d; February and March delivery 5 23-64d; March and April aeuvery 5 2t-64d. ' Spirits turpentine 25s 9d. 4 P. M. Uplands, 1 ro c, September ueiivery o sellers' option; Septem- I her and October delivery 5 21-4d, sellers' I option; October and .November delivery I R 1Q RAJ 1l -kt u i u-wiu, nuug uuuvu: xiuvBuioer ana I February and March delivery 5 23-64d, il sellers' option r March and Anril deliverv -6 25-84d, sellers' option ; April and May de - London, September 15, Noon:Consols iwi;4p..m 100J. t - v,. i I . to-dayindude 5,600 bales New Tors; Bice Olarket. . N. T. Journal of Commerce, Sept 14. . A good distributing business noted at firm prices.' - The quotations were as fol lows: Carolina and;. Louisiana," common 10 iair, 4j5ic; good to prime 5i6c: choice 6i6fc; fancy head 6f7c;Tlan- TQ 11 - 'en f 0 1 7b. O K . fn p i w5 atfcava, uu. fAi&2 All uuuu; irauia 4H0C; Java Of 5fc -''ti' V it -if; - ' ''! ".Mi '.--...'Seenesin Slam. ' In SiamUhey cut the tails of the cats so as to leave each tail an inch lone. Thfih they dye the animals a bright yellow, which mases mem look very gay. The ten-inch lizards of Biam crawl on .the ceilings and eat flies and, mosquitoes. Siamese Princes ot royal blood wear less clothes than a New xors street arab. vThe doctors in Siampre- dvuim num queer wings as crushed spiders, pieces of reptiles. CTound seroents. bonea. scrapings of the horns of wild goats, stags and rhinoceroses and the scales of fishes and insects. How much better to tell their pa tients to take Brown's Iron Bitter nd h hweu. : ; ..; o y r. . . - . -v I It Is a Fact, 1- THAT WE ARB SELLING VjUSTr AS flOOT nA. T!.i . - ua 1 A.a OOD ooas ior as nuie money as any house In this city or 8t&t 'Fsui oMnVtAf qa nWnn o. j--VxT ,T . ery aay. To satisfy yourself make a. ru,rai examination of our stock. Tour trade is solid- am m "a. . . . j r- i - ou. W. U. AlOIJSKMAN CO.,'-' se 10 tf : ..' " 1 wicreaua jieiai workers, 1 ; a auricet street. ! -.it - j; .tt "" f ttlChsHlllll n AAhtcmimIAa 41 ab Wlta DOtll the JSamhn.ntfl urxA VowmAM A vt da'CoUenisthereforethelar iore Business Men of. Wttnnngtpn.-, ' s ieV ir ;'5? I-5? 4 J. D. MoLTTflAK- 1 The Bbhesbnian, PubUshed eTerr Wednefla in f jinV, r n - " - " r-r'f v ?ur W; w: ffirnvaTrirTVa : f -' I a 'Jt.'l'lr.'fv 'Co,1 Wan. 3fercury aM Potasffe ofe m. juuuiub. i took nothineeiM r lUed for Jf improve from the fi?S and mZ have a backset from mPcc?8ionall ?c"2 rhenmatism left prudence rtebt, and the uicersf Wh?pyh ?.ppetlte b'n ttmost frightful Vhadh tofe 3 new, and by the firet Ml ZS T "'Ohfir loo.'TKitit, 'Qw than DA in,. lhavebeV,,"u,,?1 ess 7lnYl ess Caria. CB8J hardest work any J&Afr1! iwer any qnwtioTthat mav land a s ine this case. Km'hi ,ZZ . !9ay be ask 3ru an Barly grayeT "tei :..Atlanta Ga" AprU 18. 18S5. M McLK ?m McClendon has bPn ;n . essCariey Comwn?? ePlo, of(, know the above etEtmi?5.80Pto rear tune he began taking swu K S.tnwr S horrible conditionrand at !petlfic he wtl treatment with 8. & s ll? 'icltatwt1 sicUn after sevenil othehdHeken bv7 8Sh0pelly tocirabte. Hedtlare1 W& 8. S. 8 and has been as sonnH knthwS for several months. I remrth?. 48 a n do raculous. regard his cure almt 4 ' Chess CJarteyS10? Atlanta, Ga., Aprii isism.' Atlanta Caution ! remedy. An imitation is alwavo'o cheat, and they thrive onli fit2 from the article imitated 7 M b er Besure to get the genuine, and send f tlseon Blood and Skin Diseases Z Sold by all druggists SeaSe8'free- 'fnaswiTOSPKCIpiCC0 " 157 W. 23d 8L. N. T raWer 81 Atta,i - Jan20D&wi; -f, w FILLS - TEARS IN Iter Tke Greatest Medical TrSh of the Age L SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER T P1 Fnllneis after eatinir. ih - j.f Heart, Sots before the eyes, Ueadaek Z. irtt eye, BestlesUess, fi Mtfnl dreams, HieUly colored Urine, aid -CONSTIPATION,. such cases, ono dose effects su&i a coange oi ieeung as to astonish the sufferer . They Increase the Appetite.and camevh body to Take on Flesh, thus the jrstem ii nourished, and by their Tonic Action on tSS.Plsf? Xgiins,Ilegalar 8 tools are produced. Price age. 44 itfnrray St-.!t.Y. JUirS EXTRACT tlBVUUl Kenovates the body, makes healthy flesh, strengthens the weak, repairs the wastes of the system with pure blood and hard muscfc; tones the nervous system, invigorates the brain, and imparts the vigor of manhood. $1 Sold by drugrgists. OFFICES 44 Murray St., Now York Jan 30 DAW ly su we fr jan 8 New York and Wilmingtoa Steamship Co. FROM PIER 34, EAST RIVER, St' pst, At 3 o'clock P. M. GULP .STREAM Saturday,, fen.fi BENEFACTOR Thursday, &pt 1? REGULATOR' Saturday, ep 1 " Sept. $ FROM WILMINGTON. Sept. -Sept 3 Sept Oct J t,-.,, . I " nc,meBU" 1 SEGULATQK Saturday GULF STREAM Friday Rates guaranteed to and from points is Sort ana souta Carolina, For FreUfht or Passage apply to ' H. G. SMAlrLBONES, .. Superintendent, --: - J , ; ' Wilmington, H.t. Tbeo. O. Eser, Freight Agent, New Tort W. P. Clyde A Co., General Agents, se 18 tf " "-" ' " " 35 Broadway, KewT, 1MO SURPRISE! THE GOVERNMENT EKD0ESSS The American Agriculturist SOX TEE TXHTH CKSBUS, VOL. 8, JUST FUILISHE). ThA IdwUm Arrrimlfwrixt fa flmeclaUT WOfthy that has attended the unique and untirine effora of its proprietors to increase and extend tts evr enlation. Its contents are duplicated every month for a German edition, which also circu lates widely." "This Tribute la & nleasinff Incident In tne mar vellous nearly . HALF A CENTURY . Career or this reooenlzed leading Agncuiiu Journal of the world. What it is To-Day. Six months ago the merUxmAmrm ired upon a NEW CAREER OP "OSPBBj; id to-day it is far suoerior to any stofltf pen ltvrisie odlcal ever produced in this or any otnerw" try. Richer in editorial strength; richer to engra Tings; printed a on liner paper, anu vrt. I 6Tery fesne 100 colnnns of origtaal reading I tr fmm the, aJitaat urritera. and nearly lOOU'Bf I rrfA"v" 1i1U01' ni'V 17 qq I tratlons. lr. oeorge lnurper, ior I tfir nf n. nnnt.nrv th edltor-ls-cnler oiu"". I W4??W&.S,??i SSito.tl Joseph Harris, Byron i- i ""Tr Y" -s.y T.rr.t" th thn otner evAii h wain unii -janiimw u. a . stea, voi. m. v. wetu, ww uictrv- -ther other long time Editors, together with theouer writers who have made the Ank&9wa& rUi what it is to-day, ARE STILL AT TEJU POSTS. . n n year, and 15 cents extra ior posiaj ' aia-making fltaalt-wmwi tlMu WCULTURIST FAMTLY JCYCLOPf DU 7 oat). TOO PAGES AND OVER 1Q0QENGBA INGS. Strongly bound in cloth, Uses : - This entirely new volume is a remarkable sw; house and book of refereiioefor everydepa wont- A hnmon frnnwlndtre. Including an tural SupplemenVbr W.nMoer. sa VOUSPECTMEN COPi AMERICAN AGB IS?tW.twaPnt POOTT-PA.GB PBfft TURIST, AN ELEGANT FORTY-PAGi JD UM 1IST, WITH ILLUSTRATION SPJECnCEN'PAGIS OP OUR FAY PKLIA. CanyABflXBS wastsd Evsetwhkb- PTJBUBHS AMERICAN AGRICULTUBIST Dayid W. Judd, Prest. SakI. Boehha, 751 BROADWAY, NEW YOKa- ianTtf T.D. A. .SMITH'S PURNnURS . -ttatlt Of ROOMS can be found a large VALUABLE GEPW. Arfl? E?,? mrd elrlnTine Prices, call and examine Parnfture Wareroo 1MJ TS - - ' - . - - .' - E - . ,- , . . . s - ' i "-' - s
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 16, 1885, edition 1
2
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