Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Oct. 29, 1885, edition 1 / Page 2
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'n.tmivnta S.WWOTJNCK3IKNT. - .-u. ..Mao iltllf HBWl - mper TO norm vruiiim, "-r--- VrmTlt.hf : Ky subscribers at the rat oris oitor wee any period from one week to one ya , - t i a vvEHirtT STAR fa trabHshed every Friday Boring at $1 60 per year, $1 00 lor six monu w .;nta.lor tnree monuu. . VER. j . t mrMA 7rmna.ril tvDe make one sqmare. - i - Vatra . WmHy&IS. BSilS . aops, Plo-Nics, society meenngs, ngs, Ac, wuioeonargea regular mvwuub Notices under Head of "CItt Ke?'3?S??25 inmrtinn. ud 15 cents per line ior aaoh subsequont insertion. -No advertisements Inserted la Local Solnmn at ny price. -7 ' ' " : Advertisements Inserted once a week In Daily will be oharged SI 00 per sQua foreaoh Insertion. Every other day, three fourths of dally rate. . Twine a week, two thirds of dally rate. -t.-i- An extra charge will be made for doubte-ooluaa at trtple-olusm advertisements ii- . , rtntleeaof Marriage or Death, Tribute of Ee- ipeot. Resolutions of Thanks, o., llfiSSS ioras ordinary advertisements, but only hall rates when paid for strictly In advance. ; At this rate 50 cents will pay for a simple announcement of Marriage or Death. , Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to oocupy any special place, will be oharged extra according to the position desired 1 Advertisements on which no specified number of insertions is marked will be continued "till for bid." at the option of the publisher, and charged, tip to the date of dlsoontlnnanoe. . . - Advertisements discontinued before the ttoe v ontractea ior nas expu-eu, cwuisw ' fates for time aotually published. Amusement, Anotlon and Official advertisements one dollar per square for each insertion. - ' Advertisements kept under the head of "Hew Advertisements'! wUI be charged fifty,. Pef .cent extra.:.- -..V'V-'-" - ";- An announcements and recommendations of oandldates for office, whether tn the shape of : sommunloatlons or otherwise, will be ohargea tt advertisements. ., -- - - Fayments for transient advertisements must be made in advance. Known parties, or stranger . with proper reference, may pay monthly or Quar- " Contract advertisers wiH not P30,."" ceed their spaoe or advertise any thing foreign to then regular iMismesswiinous extra muub Bemlltanoes must be made by Check, Draft. Foetal Money. Order, Express, or In Registered Letter. Only such remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. Communications, unless they contain tmpor- rsuDjeoia tmrv rt.nr xrav. T.nnv win lnvaxianiv rejected If the real name of the author Is withheld. ; Advertisers should always specify the issue of ' ssues they desire to advertise in. Where no-is sue Is named the advertisement will be inserted n the Dally. Where an advertiser contracts for the naner to be sent to him during the time hil advertisement is In, the proprietor wQl only be r esponslble for the mailing of the paper to bis ad- dress. - . - .- " i TMiMorning Star! By VIL1IAM H. BEBKABD. t ; JVZLMIITG TON, IT. C. Wednesdat EvENrsre, Oct. 28, 1885 EVENING EDITION; . ' THE SIIiVKR COINAGE. The United States had coined dur-j ing, all their history up to 1843, eighty-seven millions of dollars of Bilver coins, every cent of which was . a mgiU leuuei. jlu iom, a mcjjuuu- .can Cpngress demonetized silver. It - had been a part of the currency and a legal tender all through the years. -' It was by the action of Germany and T the United States that silver depre-; ciatedn value and the value of gold - was enhanced. There is another fact connected with the silver question that should be - borne in mind. From 1798, until now the amount of silver in the stand- ard silver) dollar has not been re duced a particle. We are assured oi ine correctneEH oi inis statement from the - history ot coinage in our ntry. Mr. John A. Greer, in his I , J .1,etn c-, : little. work entitled "Our Silver Coin j age," jsays:. ! - JThe enemies of the silver dollar have -asserted : most persistently, that it is a de based, a dishonest, a crippled,, a light-- : reply to all of these base libels is an exami nation f the facts of the case. When you can. -positively reply that - the facts wilt show, that the tmount of pure silver in ours doUcfrtftonlay U exactly the tame that it, has always been from the first coinage in - VIM., until the present time, the mouths of - these libellers should be closed."-- In 1878, the silver dollar was by ' act of: a Democratic Congress re-i - stored ; to its old position jas a full legal ;. tender , for all debts except - when otherwise .expressly stipulated, . n n n i n n t. I inni m.L - r I s 'j . .gress" reduced .-..the gold dollar, by I iu cue uuutrauii, iu loot, vuo voil- I was "added. From that time - the gold dollar has remained the same. "In the United States there is not - reairv an excess ot com. it is true ; the stock is greater than ever before, but there is not as much of coin in , proportion to population as there is m some European , countries. The United States have-but $206,000,000 - 0E silver com to a population of 57,- vw.uuu or more. rance-haa sa,7.. , 000,000 of legal tender silver in cir- cumion with a population not ex- , feeding 38,000,000. ; president Cleveland, before he was s worn in, of the date of 11th of Feb- i - - USING RATES jpAIHV-?5!IL TCa- SI 00; two aays, i?o: wn . r ; ' roary, 1885,- addressed a letter to tics. If that shall ever happen, fare ;. ninety-five silver advocates in the wU to the deep reverence and high .i6ui,Mic0. .. iu iu uo . said that it could '0)6 shown that it w!" take more labor, or more of the prouuee oi . laoor,; to. pay : what -re- majns of our national. debt now than il uld have taken to pay it all at the close of tlie war." : .This is on "a line with the statement quoted some " days ago in the Stab made byMr. ..Crosg in 1883) British House of CommgMrCleveland says that bflGS f " " interest beating debt, hereas it will tal thmy.ve b.tfei t remaps of una draw thfiir ftwn conclusions.. - It must be remembered, that when Ger many went to work in: 1873 , taefeate a gold standard only that the "jpanio began and from that time4until now, with perhaps the exception of three years, there has been an uneasy feel ing, and a" depressed condition, more or less, in the industries of this coun try and other countries. " ---- Mri NV P. Hill,' in his paper in the North American JReview previously referred to in the Stab, says that if silver dollars were ourrent at their "bullion valued jtheyi would have "a purchasing power, greater- than . any kind of dollars -bad in I860." He insists and argues .that ; great dis asters-have befallen Vdebtor tax- payers, industries, and all kinds of property, excepting only money," by this ceaseless . war upon i Silvei,: He .says : that greater -disasters are : even, 'threatened, and .Min vie w, of. the fact that; an immense majority of the people of .this coun try are debtors, tax-payers or labor ing men, how annoying does it seem, that the administration of the national finances is nowy and. for many years v has been in the hands of men who are subservient to the interests of the few money lenders, and antagonistic to the interests of the great mass of the people, and who are compelled to borrow money." j : No w a silver dollar contains a dol lar's worth of silver just as it did forty yerrs "ago. . Understand that. If it does not contain a dollars worth of bullion at a gold standard it is be cause of the dominating power of the creditors and money-lenders the class referred to above by Mr." Hill. The purpose to force a gold stan dard upon the country will even tuate in commercial ruin if success ful. The historian, Archibald Ali son, says that the contraction of the currency in 1821 caused as mucn loss to the capitalists, by lowering their rate of interest, as it caused to producers, by lowering .the price of commodities. ' Is not this ' lesson be ing repeated in this country. , The very threat : of contraction works evil to both money lenders and bor- rowers. Money is worth lj per cent, in New York to-day, and. has been for months. Professor Walker is quoted by Mr. Hill as saying that if silver is abandoned it will enhance the "burden ", of all debts and . fixed charges, acting-as a steady drag up on production," and that "suffoca tion, strangulation, are words hardly too strong to express the agony of the industrial body when embraced in the fatal coils of a contracting money" WOMAN SUFFRAGE. There is an Irish poet in Boston by the name of O'Reilly, j He is a man of ability and observation. He is nrtnnRAfl tn vnmtn nflFroro unA oil . , n , - . . T. that follows, and most wisely. He does not oppose because he does not appreciate the superiority of women to men in virtue and goodness. So far from this he says: ' 'Women are better than men because .they are spiritual, while men are intellectual.; The spirit follows what is true, gentle and Rooa; the intellect follows only what is pleasant, successful, dominating, strong. If women coma rule, civnizauon would be a poem.'- -- . - : Yes, and before a century it would be a chaos. With men jocking the cradle and women making laws' and running for office there , would, be a delightful state of affairs. , But Mr o,Rp:llv : Anom nf , .i;. ve that a . "poem" ought to be of civilization by, Ji 4l r , J :"Womei'' are ? better T than ' men and weaker. They ought to rule, butihey' can't. They would make ideal laws, and men would break them defiantly: and the open trampling on law is anarchy and chaos, the issue of which would be aeain the rule of the strong." No, it would not do to hand over the governing to even "the strong minded." The Astasias. Boadiceas. I Zenobias. Cleopatras and Elizabeths of history would have a bad showing I in fre Amm.; : " i. ten construed to mean license, and where human life m held at a heavy - discount. The greatest curse that has ever hftfallMi .i'u. w vuawa auiiva - v ilia i a em the introduction of woman into poli- i wuibcoicH vl me pass and the beautv and sanctity of home. ? Nay we inaV I say farewell to the country, f or de- cadence will set in from that hour. Mr. O'ReUlv.is far too nitnr; and knows too well the worth of woman' to caU. her by the soft and now almost t nnmeanino wm-a i7 The ignorant , think they are paying a snecial comnliment whn thv r. fer to the ladies, and they alsS think theysaying-something unbecoming and : offensive in call ing them women.' But our Saviour re ferred to his own mother as a toomari Said , the Master ; as he - was . hanging on the bloody cross: "Woman, oe- hold thy son.'? Afterward; the Apos- lies addressed tne uooie - ana loviyg woman who" folio wed J esus to;the Jast-'Last at the Cross, and first at the Sepulchre" "Woman, whyweep- est thou." There U ' noaweefef ?r truer " . word in our language han woman. . It is a poor 1 substitute, to. call her lady t Thus far ;np land has ever been more blessed and favored than onr - own in its : noble afld pure and good rwomen. Mayjt v ever",; be SO. 1 , - The Indictment of Mr. ? Stefd,gthe editor of the London PaU MaU Ga zette, if technically correct. That is to. say, he violated law in order to make good what he had., charged ; others with doing, ut tis, manif est that he i was not - violatmg law in ' the. sense of : the, iordiniwy culprit, V-H's offenceV is purely - technical, and the law be vTolated was not enacted - to meet such cases as, his.; : But ; .hewill be convicted prpbably, and yet every man in the Kingdom will believe it to be unfortunate, : because nnjust, who is not opposed to exposing crime. Mr, Stead has not acted prudently, it may, be, in stirring up the dirt and filth because it makes enemies against himself who are very powerful. His course 7 m the Armstrong case may have been violative of layr and of decency, "bujt no onojbelieyes he was criminal in the ordinary sense of the 'term, ", , ;-. ";'";.' . ---. 'v'. Some, newspaper - dr . newspapers gave a very touching account of what purported to be the domestic mfelici ties of Mrs. Nellie Sartoris, the daughter so much beloved by Gen. Grant. . They went so far as to say that bscause of bad treatment she would sue for a divoroe. -The divorce part of the story is emphatically con trad ic ted by her mother, and she adds that her daughter is very much af fected by the groundless report. It was very ,cruel and mean on the part of the person who set this lie fn mo tion. It is a very delicate matter in deed when newspapers undertake to invade the privacy of , the marriage chamber and pretend to uncover to a gaping and hungry multitude the domestic flashings, heart-burnings and sorrows, and to show the skele ton in the closet. The Stab is glad that Mrs. Sartoris is happier than was reported and that her home will not be broken up. The strong-minded women of New York State are represented as being resolved upon voting if they can. There are no enemies of the human race comparable to the class of men and women who are warring against social laws and arrangements for the purpose of giving the ballot to the women and introducing them into the demoralizing .Arena of politics and the . hustings.' We hope the South will be long spared such a vis itation ' of unmingled ihame and evil. V v -PortheSTAK. WILMIXQTON JLND ITS MEN Ma. Editob: I am reading the Stab of Sunday (8 p. m. Monday night.) 1 nnd these words: The Asheville Citizen is "always Inend- ly , to a W llmington an .,- extract is copied from that paper you say;1 -xae yuizen says mat vvumington has not the vigor it had m 1834, fifty years - go. Is this so?" I say, do you not know it is so? Does not every one familiar with Wilmington, and North Carolina history, know it is painfully so? . : l In 1836. a party, of gentlemen met in a house that stood on a part of the ground now covered by the fine brick edifice, erected by the - late P. K. Dickinson, . Esq.' , (he then being a widower l, and organized the corpo ration that built the Wilmington & Weldon (then Kaleigb) railroad. He gave the writer once a detailed ac count of that meeting. Some of the corporators were Gov E. B. Dnrllv. P. K. Dickinson, Robert H. Cowan. Wm. B. Meares, Aaron Lazarus and James Owen. They and their asso ciates met at . this house, and Mr. Dickinson remarked they bad' two or three baskets of champagne in the house. 1 hey opened books of sub scription, and they opened bottles of champagne.: Thev drank and they BuosoriDea and oetore the party broke up $300,000 of the capital stock had been subscribed for and the char ter thus secured, before they went forth, to ask the public generally to Such were the men of -1834 and 1836. vDo you see anything like them around loose now r Then the rea estate valuation was less than $400". 000 and the population 3,000. They began and finished the largest line of railroad then in the world. J r OTv I'-Stevens oflVash mgton Territory, cited the case of this enterprise at a railroad meeting twenty-five f years ago" at Pao-At.'a 9ound ?Jtpw show what a determined people couiado, when -' there were ave and active, men leading. - ? - -Whyd ihe2 toeonlfcof WlImL, ton lay down and sleep When their neignDors merchants ' of Norfolk, Petersburg andHichmond. and all over : the 'country, , are sending their soliciting- agents into every; town and Jxamlet along the lines .of trans portation fronv Wilmington -to the interior and, obtaining . the business that-belongs vof ; right to them. Jt uns always ueea bo Wnat a epu . . did location Wilmingtbrf has for im:; pbrtation and distribution: to the in terior for running the products and exporting l . : Jden . make , tne city. God makes the cpuutry-' 1 Who are the men of td-day Afid what are,they doing to build up ? A " . . CURRENT COMMENT. Cardinal Newman appears to have thrown the weight of;his influ ence with English" ; Catholics against the-j disestablishment - of the' State Church in England, advising them to' support the Tories in the approach ing election.' ; Superficially looked at, this course on. the part of the prelate is surprising. 7 It might be supposed ., . f . , . i . mat aisestaDiisnmenc meant .weaken ing for the Church of England; and tnrpugn it ior rrotestantism , gener ally. But this is not truef : It would mean a possible diminution oi the clergy and " laity of the Episcopal Church, but those ' dropping out would tend. toward other Protestant denominations, and those remaining1 would inevitably take on greater in dependence of. thought and action. No additional strength would be im parted to the, Cathoho faith by the measure." " Tte- stand, the Cardinal takes has itff reasons in the traditions and policy , of Home, : grown gray with the lapse of centuries. United Church and State, oneness of tempo ral and spiritual power these are what he believes in. The tendenoy to reverse the order of things is too prevalent in Europe to be palatable to the church. Italy, France and Germany have divorced religion and government, and the control - of princes and their revenues by the church has become a mere memory. JS. X. Star. .There can never again be an era of great prosperity for men who work in the mills and factories unless a reduction of tariff taxation shall lessen ..the cost, of living, and shall throw open the markets of. the world to our own products.' A free field is better for the workmgmen, than a ueiu . nemrneu j in uy statues,, wmcn proviae opportunities ior ine cun ningof the unscrupulous. No reve nue reformer desires to injure a single industry, but all intelligent men, who understand the condition of our manufacturers and who are free from prejudice, know that lower tariff taxes will bring an era of more gen eral prosperity, and thereby the workingmen would be benefited. The law of to-day serves no one ex cept those who are in a position to take advantages of technicalities in the statute books and in treasury de cisions. Manufacturers have been able to make the government a part ner in business, and this partnership has been of most avail to the special interests controlled by men adroit enough to manipulate Congress and the lYeasury omcers. Wages would not be reduced, and mills would not close, if there should.be an' average reduction of fifty per cent.' of the prevailing rates of duty; but work ingmen would be benefited by reason of the decreased cost of the necessa ries of life. Boston Post, Dem. -Dean Stanley and Sbarteabary. Letter from Dean Bradley to the Editor of tne Liondon Times. . In my absence from London I have only just been able to lay my 4 hand on a paper which will. I am sure.! have a deep interest for a very wide circle ot your readers, it will be valuable also as showing the more than kindly relations which existed between - my lamented predecessor and the great Christian philanthropist wnose remains we snouid ail nave de sired to rest beneath the same roof as his own. The lines and the note will tell their own story. 1 received them, together with a letter from Lord Shaftesbury, in November of last year: . , ' . 'Trunco,rhon frondibus, elflcit umbram. Well said old Lucan: often have I seen A StrinMn? trA ftll fnllairo anri oil rrraan But not a hope of cratefuL soo thins? shade. Its empty strength in flattering leaves dis played. . .; -. . l ,r Give me the solid trunk, the acred stem That rears its scant but elorious diadem r That throusrh lone vears of battle or of storm Has striven a whole forests round it to re form;- ' , 7 That plants its roots loo deep for man to snase. That lifts its head too high for grief to break; That still, through lightning flash ; and -- thunderstroke, ' Retains its vital sap and heart of oak. -Such gallant tree for me shall ever stand . A ereat rock's shadow in a weary land. Mat, 1873.' A. P. S. Note. I have Written to Canon Conway to , say, that he had better find , some new and younger Chair man ior the annual flower show in Dean's Yard, adding that I. was Jn the condition" of "a tree which, as Lucan says, ?- "casts "a ; shadow no longer by its leaves, but only by its stem." He sent the note to - the Dean, who returned it with the verses above. I knew that the Dean was very kindly disposed toward me, out l did not know how kindly. .." '.' ' '''''.. Shaptesbubt. own e, D. 0. Founded 1789. THE ACADEMIC AND SCIENTIFIC SCHOOLS ?Peri3SRt'J1' 188& -PPly to PRESIDENT of THS 8CHOOU OP MEDICINE opens Sept. 21st, 90J 12th at , N. W., WASBTHQTON, D. C. THE SCHOOL OJ LAW opens on the first Wed esday ia October. Apply to SAML.U.YAAT- ; MAN,8M,oor.6thandjB,Sts.,Jt.WWashlnsj- ton, v. O. " .' -. . . J1'8 A- DOONAN.S. J- Jtasmmw. i Jy 2a 8m ' sat wed M0HA1B, PLT8H; ANIMAL, AND BLANKET a rkif&Sh SPe Blankets m treat variety. m;Swr1n"v?15-00 ?S&es lance assort ment Of all kinds Of Vfihlnloa nt nn. mnn f uiim iTVvv . ' """'w w uux own maun- TnvdeX"wtnK celebrated makers: CarriW rJi anXiiiA.0" WTOHCe Co., .Favorite eveSVow!""1"?'' - oo 25 tf , MoDOTJQALL &BOWDXN. rHE LATEST NEWS; FE0U ALL PARTS OF THE WOELDP t M URDERO US i ASSAULT. A Negro Attack a : TV bite man with a : Hatchet and Fraetnre hl Sbnli. .. V. By Telegraph to the "Morning Star. "': 'PhtlAdklphULT :Octri-2a Robert1 j' Cook. treasurer of the Press Company, was attacked early, this ..morning by Stephen, MacPheraon, colored, janitor of the buildri ing, and struek on the head with a hatch et, hating his Skull fractured;- The injured man. It is thought - Will die. - .lie was re-r moved to theliospitar'and his assailant, after an attempt1 to' escape,' . Was -captured He is a largo musctxlar negrov antt had beenj censured .by Cook for allowing gas to, es- cape. It.ls said, pook 'struek JJSfacPbersbn first, and the latter, thenused", the hatchet. The vicUmhadTa natioBal'rreputalibn as an athlete,' having bwn'caplaia of the; famous trainer iTCoIlegiB i 'crews forjeevral ryears. Appointments ! W the : 1.5 Frealdent Fourth. Claaa Poatmaater. Bjf Telegraph o the Morning Star. . WAsnriiaf ONrttJct '28. The : President maueme ioiiowidjc appoinunenw w-usyr w.i Lieo i-jjinKins, t or jussisaippi; J. v.. Marshal for thBTjotflhern" District of Jftts-f sissippi ; Edmund B Brlmrs,1 of the District of Columbia, -U 8 Consul,' flantos, Brazil, Fourth class postmnters-vireioia; Lees- ville. -V." Snow v North" Carolina, i Central Falls, AJ!0.McAlisterr ruriear, eo. u.' -JuiQluneSsy : s Georgia; xtorcross. v Jos. i 'Jones ; Florida, Carrabelle,' ?F." Lv Kelley 1 Crystal River, II. T. lJartman; Alabama, Showdown " 'J;", AJ Callaway: 31 ississippi, Johnsouville. .'Edward" Short: . Stonewall. Miss Amanda . J. Cowarl ;f Louisiana, Dia mond, Jphn. Boothivv ' LABRADOR. Terrible Hurricane on .the Coast I Serenty Vtiulu and Three Hundred ' Lives Iot ' r1 - ''"'' s':'-- ? ' ; tBv Teleph to tto Mornfajc Star.l St. JvHh's. N. P., October 28. The "hurricane that raged on the Labrador coast was unprecedented even in that inclement region.. Over seventy vessels and probably three hundred lives were lost. The barque Nellie has joist arrived with two hundred and sixty shipwrecked men, women and children, rescued from the disaster.' Seve ral women died from exposure and others were drowned.- Over two thousand persons are destitute and stranded on the coast. "Five steamers have been dispatched to their assistance. ' The worst is not yet Known. TENNESSEE. J- Strike on the Sonth Atlantic Railroad. By Telejrraph to tha Horning Star. L.YKCHBUBO,' Va., Oct. 28. A strike on the South Atlantic Railroad occurred yes terday at Bristol, Tenn., when the whole force on the line quit work. The strike is for one dollar and twenty-five cents per day, the wages paid now being eighty five cents It is thought that a compromise will be euectcd and wora resumed to mor row. , . ' FOREIGN. Reported Bevolntlon In fllandalay Discredited. - IBt Cable to the Jtomlmr Star.l London, October 28. The government discredits the rumor from Rangoon, that a .revolution nas broken out at Mandalay, and that King Thebaw, of Burmah, had been murdered. HO S U E PR I S E! THE (JOYEKNKENT ENDORSES The American Agriculturist TBOU THX TXHTa CXHBTJS, VOL. 8, JVtTt FUZLXBHSD The American Agriculturist Is especially worthy of mention, beoaoae of the remarkable saooees that has attended the unique and untiring- efforts of Its proprietors to Increase and extend Its cir culation. Its contents are dnnUoated everv month for a German edition, which also circu lates wiaeiy." This Tribute Is a pleasing Incident In the mar- veuous nearly HALF A CENTURY . Career of this recognized leading Agricultural journal or tne worm. What it is To-Day. loerlor to jit similar neri- oucai ever proaaoea in vnis- or any otner coun try. Kicher In editorial strength; richer In engra- vmtrs; pnniea on nner paper, ana presenting va every issue 100 eolunins of orurmal readlnc mat ter from the ablest writers, and nearly 100 Illus trations. Dr. George Thurber. for nearlv Quar ter of a century the editor-in-chief of the Amer ican Agriculturist. Joseph Harris, Byron D. Hal- sted, vol m. u. wold, and Andrew 8. Fuller, the other lonjr time Editors, together with the other writers who have made the American Agricultv- rvt wnai is co-uay, . ajus oixuli at -lajiLU "WHAT, FREE ?? ? Everv subscriber, whose snban-Ftntinn In IWVH DIATELY forwarded ns with the price, $1.50 per year, and 15 cents extra for postage on Cyclopse dia making $1.66 la all will reoeire the Ameri can Agriculturist English or German for all of 1888, ana do presented witn tne ajlbkiuah AG WCCLTURI8T FAMILY ICYCLOPDIA (Jnst out), 700 PAGES AND OVEH 1O0O ENGBAV INGS. Strongly bound In oloth, black and gold.' This entirely new volume is a remarkable store house and book of reference for every depart- meat of human knowledge Including an Agri cultural Supplement by Dr. Thurber. r SEND TBJKEB 8-CENT STAMPS FOB KATLING YOU SPECIMEN COPY AMERICAN AGRICUL TUBISTf AN ELEGANT FORTY-PAGE PREMI .UM 1I8T, WITH 800 ILLUSTRATIONS. AND SPECIMEN PAGES OF OTJB FAMILY CYCLO- PfiDIA. . CASVJJ9SXBS WABTID BVXBTWHXBS. , '; Address PUBLISHEE3 AMEEICAN AGRICULTUEIST David W. Jtod, Prest. Sam!. Btjkktsax, See - ' 751 BBOADWAT, rTEW YORK. Jan 7 tf ADYERTISEO nerchant and Farmer ".' FUBLD3HKD WEEKLT AT , MARJ0NtS0 TTTB CAROLINA It has a large and mcreaslng circulation in the heart of the PeesDee country, the best Cotton section of the two States. It Is a desirable medium of communication 'with both the Merchants and Farmers of this section, and particularly with those of Marion and Marlboro Counties. - It is therefore the paper for the Business Men of Wilmington. - JTaVMoLUCAS, -: decStf ; . : . Proprietor. The Home JoTirnal, PUBLISHED EVEBT FEIDAT FOKNING . I At.Warrenton, N. CL joun w. mciis, . , , EDITOR AND PROPRIEfOR. It has a splendid circulation In the counties of warren, vanoe, Halifax, n. CandMeoklenbi y a. as an aavertisuig medium it is ' ji.ov a yea? m aavancn. aaaress THE HOME JOTXBNAL, rf, Warrenton. N. C apStf The Centra Protestant A WEEKLY RELIGIOUS ANTFAMILY NEWB paper and tiie Organf the Methodist Protest tant Church In- North Carolma, is published at Greensboro, N. C. . . ,U fw per ariTiTiTTi, m uTanoe. The elliribllltT tt it irwHvn ka mmKa -ft?-af?nt8' andtoe constantly Increas ing demand for it among the more soUdolassesof PROTEST A0!,01 . t CENTRAL TAJJT peculiar claims upon the patron-SSJ!er5wbulf- everyfwS, Saedttw buslneaa Interest, and address i . , - -vvwwwaM wsw UUAUMVI UU 3. L. MICHATJX, Greensboro N. O. ' COipiERfiIAL,frr- Wlli M I1STGTON M ARRET 8TAU OFFICE, Oct. 28, 4 P. M. SPIRITS TURPENTINE-The market was, quoted firm., at 33i cents per gallon with sales ot ou casKS at ibeee figures. - ?"ROSIN-Thd-market:was quoted quiet at. 80 cents per bbl for Strained" and 65 cents for Good Strained. ' . TAR-yrhe market:' was "quoted firm ats $1 25 per , bbL of s 280 lbs. - CRUDE TURPENTIISTB-Market steady at $1 50 for Virginl and- Yellow Dip and 1 00 for' Hard.- 1 -i.-; - . -: COTTON Market. , quiet and steady, with sales of 300 bales on a basis of 9 cents per lb for . Middling. The following were, uits. uiuuuuquuiauonsr : ; ;. ; . ,.. - .-. t Ordinary. . . ...... ... 6 11-16 cents lb. Good Ordinary.-. . ... 7 15 16 " - Low Middling. .... 8f - MiddlirarivVi.Vi.ir.vi 8 i ; - Good Middling... v. . . 9 :- : . " RICE Market steady and unchanged. We quote:. Rough: Upland 8090 cents ; Tidewater $1 -001 15. Clean : Common 4j4f cents;"Fairi4f5i, cents; Good 5f 5f cents; Prime 5$6 cents; Choice 6i cents per pound? 4 ' ' : : ' TIMBER Market steady, with sales as follows ? Prime and4 Extra Shipping, first- class hearti $9 0010- 50 per M. feet; Extra !MU1,; good heart, $6'508 00 Mill Prime, $8 '006.50; Good Common Mill, $ 4 00 5 00; Inferior to Ordinary, f 3 004 00. PEAIHUTS Market steady at 4447 .cents for Prime, 51 cents for. Extra Prime, and. 55 cents., for . Fancy, per. bushel . of 23 lbs. , .;.. :- , ,. . 5- -: RECEIPTS. Cotton.. 1,121 bales ; 281 casks , 719 bblB Spirits Turpentine. ; . Rosin Tar. - , Crude Turpentine . . . . 'I.. . 212 bbls . 29 bbls .; OOI&TJBSTICJtlAKaETS: IBy Telegraph to theMornlng. Star.l '; '"' ' .Financial. New York, October 28, Noon. Money active, stead v and easy at 33 per cent. Bterlinz exchange 483i485r. State bonds neglected. Governments dull and strong. ; - : r Commercial. ' Cotton quiet, with sales reported to-day Of 179 bales; middling uplands 9 ll-iec middling Orleans 91c. . Futures steady sales at the following quotations: . October 9.50c; November 9.45c; December 9.48c January 9.56c; February 9.67c;March 9.78c; Flour dull and heavy. Wheat- lower Corn , unchanged. Pork dull at. $9 50 10 00. Lard steadv at S6 10. Spirits tur pentine dull at 3636ic. Rosin dull at $1 02il 15. Freights firm. Baltimore, Oct. 28. Flour quiet and lower "for city mills; Howard street and western super-13 123 60; extra $3 75 4 35; family $4 505 12; city nulls su per $3 003 .25 ; extra $3 754 00. Wheat southern easy and. quiet; western higher and quiet; southern: red 9395c; southern amber 98c$l 01; No. 1 Maryland 94c bid; No. 2 western winter red on spot 9192c. Corn southern steady; western steady and more active; southern white, old 5556c; new 50c; yellow 5354c; western mixed on spot 5050c. !Bt Cable to the Morning Star. I LivKRPOOL, October 28, Noon. Cotton flat and irregular; middling uplands 5 5-1 6d; middling Orleans 5 9-16d; sales to day of 8.000 bales, of which 500 were for speculation and export; receipts 2,500 bales, all of which were American. Fu tures weak;' uplands. 1 m c, October deliv ery 5 13-645 10-64d; October and No vember delivery 5 10-645 9-64d; Novem ber and December delivery 5 ll-645 9-64d; December and January delivery 5 ll-645 9-64d: January and February delivery 5 12-645 ll-64d; February and March delivery 5 16-645 14-64d; March and April delivery 5 18-645 17-64d; -April and May delivery 5 23-645 22-64d; May and June delivery 5 26-645 24-64d. Tenders of cotton to day 1,600 bales old docket and 3,800 bales new docket. ; 5 P. M. Uplands, 1 m c, October deliv ery 5 12-64d, buyers' option; October and November delivery 5 12-64d, sellers' option ; November and December delivery 5 11 64d, buyers': option; December and January delivery 5 12-64d, sellers' option; January and February delivery 5 13-64d, buyers' op tion ; February and March delivery 5 26-64d,: buyers' option ; March and April delivery 519-64d, buyers' option; April and May delivery 5 23-64d, sellers' option ; May and June delivery 5 26-64d, value. Futures closed firm. - Sales of - cotton, to-day include 6,500 baxea American. London, October 28, 5 P. M. Spirits turpentine fiat: spot 26s; November and December delivery 26s; January and April delivery. 27s. : New TorK Navsvl stores irxarttet. N. Y. Commercial Bulletin, Oct. 27. Receipts to-day, 719 bbls rosin, 42 do spirits turpentine, and 50 do tar . Very lit tle change was to be found on this market, prices all through being held precisely , as last noted." There were a few buyers of spirits turpentine on the spot, and36c was paid; but for large quantities very little in quiry was observed. The Southern mar kets afforded no encouragement to holders here, while from London an actual decline of 3d was noted. .The option market ruled steady, with some interest manifested on the part of buyers for next month's deliv ery. Sales, 400 bbls l November at 86c. The jobbing transactions in rosins were at former prices. v,.. SaTsouaait Rice Market. , Savannah. News, Oct. 27. x The market was dull and more or less nominal. There was only a light inquiry and a very small business was doing. The sales for the day were only 25 ' barrels at unchanged prices; The' official quota tions of the Board of Trade were as fol lows: Fair 4i4fc; Good 5i5fc; Prime 5f6c. : f - ' Rough" rice Country lots 95c$l 10; tidewater 1 201 45. New York Peanat market. N.Y. Journal of Commerce, Oct. 27. Sales are limited to moderate quantities. Quoted at 44c for best hand picked, and 33fc for farmers' grades; , . CopartnewM Notice. TKK TTNPESSIGirEID HAVING BOUGHT THB entire stock of Goods of Messrs. HANSEN & SMITH. ooasistinK of SHIP CHANDLBRY AND GROCKB8, are prepared to carry on the busi ness, and bear a continuance of the same liberal patronage that has been extended to the former firm. Respectfully, ' , 00 4 tf -KUBB A D03CHER. Grates. O ALT. AND 8KB WHAT WE HAV IN THE way of OEATBS,- from the cheapest to those a little higher In price. We are selling STOVES, both Heating; and Cooking, right along. The Far mer Girl is all the ra?e-tbe best that ever stood on four feet. -All kinds of Job Work done well and m good time; no exorbitant charges. ' " - W. MX, AAtUJU&MAM-A uo. oolatf 85vMarket Street, 1 One Experience oTiuW' Having experienced a great deal of "Troubler, from in,Mo,: . came near losing my ' 80 thI lAfttj - My trouble always camA rt food: c'tai'ngaDy , . - However light And IniiloaottKi. For two or three hours at a tiffie I hart , through the most M lo Excruciating pains, "And the only way I got" "Relief!" Was bv thrnwinn n ii go contained!! No oean "Lleb PaA8tTi ..had 10 throu8h7unu,Ve be I was taken 1 8o that v lay in bed and r tbree Could eat nothing in Mv 8Ufferinpa tub At last I heard I good deal About your Hop Bitters! And determined to try them " Got a-bottlfi in contents of llook ,Le One 111 Next day I was out of hpH seen a '"uullwiio "Sick !" Hour, from the same cause, since 1 have recommAnripH it j" . others. You have no iuoh moa ' "Advocate as I am." Geo. KraDALL, Allston, Boston, Ma s. Downriglit Cruelty. To permit yourself and family t0 "Suffer!" With sickness when it can be prevHii,.H and cured so easily wwim With Hop Bitters ! ! ! rNone genuine without a bunch of Hops on the white label. Shun all the vfe" sonous stuff with "Hop" or "Hops" in theh octBD&wim tnthsat chm tfe 0 the penerutivTor 1 Leru is no misuke S tluiiugl'. the narti M5 l&r I n 'v them to hlthr '2' fijJl 1 '-"'iiMto WtuZ Electric BcitOoT. ao 2lily tn th eat Fjjpjpd Restored remeha8Boovere3agimplemensSlSS!? which he will Bend FREB to hl fliiT,-, .a Addreaa.J.HVESffiltWr noyapuawiy tnthsat nov20 New York and WilmingtOi SteamsMp Go. FROM P1EB 34, EAST ETVUR, 5EW Y0KS At 8 o'clock P. M. BEGTJLATOB Saturday, 0c:. si BENEFACTOR Saturday, Nov. 7 REGULATOR Saturday, Nov. 14 njuMjir a-iuu Saturday, Nov. si FROM WILMINGTON. GULF STREAM Friday, Oct. 30 REGULATOR , .Friday, Nov. K BENEFACTOR... Friday. Nov 13 REGULATOR Friday, Nov J4 9" Through Bills Lading and LoweitTarati Bates guaranteed to and from point? Iri Nort' and Soatn Carolina. For Freight or Passage apply to H. G. SMAILBONES, Superintendent, Wilmington, N. O. Tbeo. O, Eser, Freight Agent, New York.. W. P. Clyde & Co., General Agents, oa25tf 35 Broadway. New To. Adrian & Vollers QFFKR FOB SALE, AT LOW FIGURES, FLOUR, all grades, SUGAR, COFFEE, " MOLASSES, Cuba and Porto Bi PROVISIONS, BUTTER, CHEESE, LARD, 1 . CRACKERS and CAKES, POTATOES and ONIONS.: BICE, MACKEREL,' SPICES, TEA, CANNED GOODS, 1 ' ' Oysters, Salmon, Corn, Tomatoes, Peaches, Ac. BAGGING and TIES, NAILS, SOAP, TOBACCO, CIGARS,: se6tf v 'and CIGABETTES, XilTVrF;. T.TTvrm LIMB. 1800 EBLS E0CKLAND BEST QBALrrT. FOR SALE SEND IN YOUR ORDERS, se 8 tf WORTH ft WORTH. The Blue Ridge Baptist. ORGAN OF THB BAPTISTS OF WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA. Joseph E. Carter, Eflltor & Proprietor. The best AdvertislngMedium for ourMountoto- section, because it knows no county lines ( the only Religious Journal in the State we thCnUd6 tafaUi, earnest In work, consecrated pffihed every Tuesday at HEOT. VILLB,N.C. Subscription price for oney f 1.B0 Send jor sample copy. ix TheiEobesonian, Published every Wednesday in Lumberton, C By ,W W. HcDIABW ID xx largest aaveruBiug v""" inndre aea m the Siate,- It now bas overeighthun , scribers In Bobesoa oounty 'lca: eral circulation In toe counties ol Jd berland, Bladen, Columb Mohmon the adjoining counties, Marlon, aO - Hi
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 29, 1885, edition 1
2
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