Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Jan. 15, 1886, edition 1 / Page 2
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3 J .? i :' S ' - S. . - I- 1 n -. i IP m I 'I, - I ' rau'w.'iFif Test daily tew aperia Forth Or-, published daUy.exeep tfonday, at S'- cr. per year, $4 00 for six monies 2 C3 for three mcr.tcs, a 1.50 for two months; too ?ar on month, to mail subscribers. Delivered to 3tfiX subscribers at the rate of 15 cents per wees vi? perlo-1 from one week to one yea? : ! i re;; vS"S3St.-v STAS Is published every Friday truing at 1 60 per year, $1 00 for six months o -sma for three months. j i ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One 'sgiiare iss day, 1 00; two days, $1 75: three days, 260j t3.iT days, S3 00 ; Ave days, 3 SO ; one wees, 5400; two weeks, $3 CO : three weeks $S 50 ; one montn, $ 10 GO ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $24 00 ; six months. 40 00; twelve months, $00 00. 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Where an advertiser oontracta for the paper to be sent to him during the time his advertisement is in, the proprietor win only be responsible for the mining of the paper to his ad dreea j i 1 j : The MorningStar. By WILLIAM II. BEBNAP J, WILMI1TQ TON, If. C. Thursday EvEirrv Jan.' 14, 1 886, EVENING EDITION. SOUTHER EDUCATION 1NU SILF . RELIANCE. Discussing the dangerous proposi tion to saek Federal aid in educating the children in the States; the Loais yille Courier-Journal; which is of tener right in its opinions on public questions than any of out Southern exchanges, has some Tery pertinent -objections. They are not I j new to "our readers for the Star ha: present ed them in different connections in its many discussions o Pedagogy, but thev are Paternal important We are gratified to see so able and the widely circulated a paper' as Courier-Journal so vigorously and consistantly opposing the Blair scheme. It says among other things and with truth: ;j "We all know how easy it to shut our eyes to consequences. We like to take our ease and trust to tome food fortune to step in and shield us from the results of oar own actions. So we try to think that we caa invoke Federal aid in lone direction without having Federal interference in another. This is preposteroui j It seems therefore to us most unwise to seek an alliance with the Federal Govern ment in this work. It js, or ought to be, pre-eminently the work of the gtate, and the State is amply able to undertake it. If Georgia, for instance, ihoul4 tax itself as New Hampshire does, it! would have an admirable school system.") l The South has done admirably al ready m this direction. Such an in telligent observer and friend of eda- cation as Rev. Dr. Mayo of Boston, and who has spent some years in the South in the prosecution of educa- tional plans, has more than 1 once born n nn An .Mt.imMiv ' J ti j ,! l J bUQ up votion and liberality of the! Southern to the de- people in behalf of education. He has declared that no people-have ever made sueh sacrifices underj the cir cumstances for education - &4 the Southern nnnl hav nila T f f- ! JL U I true they have not done all that could have been done or ought to be done, but there is progress. Georgia lags in the race. She, as well as North Carolina, could do a great deal more for education than has I been done. New Hampshire taxes herself $577,- - 622 for schools on a valuation of $200,000,000, whilst Georgia (taxes ; herself but $498,533 on a property ..valuation of $300,000,00ol' : The in crease in the valuation of! property since 1880, in the South, is more than 1,000 million dollars'. This is for taxable property So there ought to be a corresponding increase in the school fund. The South lean! raise several million dollars more for edu cation than it did in 1880 ; and with out burdening the people more in 1886 than they were burdened jn 1880. A great people are always a self-reliant people.. " v! if-i-' f The Charleston Msws arpi Courier has published a long and exoellehtly prepared review of the progress of the State of South .. Carolina. , To get tip such a report requires a heavy expenditure of time and labor,;and the performance is bighlr creditable to the newspaper. Within five years South Carolina has increased its real and personal ! property more than $25,000,000; the increase in manufac tures is more thau ' $21,000,000; the" increase im agricultural ! productions is more than $8,000,000; the increase in live stock ia more than $9,000,000; the increase in agricultural machinery is $1,400,000. During the five years $2,600,000 has been expended upon railroads. This is gratifyingprogress. South Carolina is rapidly developing. Her people are becoming much more conservative and progressive. AN INSPIRED SINGER 1 It may be conceded that thus far the North has developed more poeti cal genius than the South has devel oped.; While it has produoed a Bry ant, a Longfellow, a Whittier, an Emerson, a Lowell, and many other genuine sons of sbng,it has also given birth to some daughters who in their effort to immortalise, themselves will doubtless throw a bright halo around their native States. The pub lic has been familiar for some years with ! the "sweet singer of Michi gan' Mrs. Julia A. Moore. Her wonderful productions have excited the highest interest and secured for her own brow a wreath of immor telles. But she has a very strong rival in Mrs. Sarah A. Kelley, of I Pennsylvania. This very gifted bard has applied to the Congress for a fat salary, and for the conferring of the Poet Laureateship upon her. She calls herself fondly and, doubtless, appropriately, the "National Poet Laureate Aspirant and Bard of Shanty Hill." How very touch ing ! She is evidently one of your poets born. She has drunk freely of the inspiring waters of Helicon, or of some equally inspiring spring at the foot of "Shanty Hill." She will reflect undying glory on her State, and, if the Congress shall crown her with the bays of the "Nation" she will pour a perfect cataract of glory on the American eagle. That her geuius is pure and fine the following exquisite lines amply testify. She lings: "I was the very best of teachers, At least my praises so were sung By A, N. Bullard. Superintendent Of Susquehanna County at the time ; I was educated most resplendent." That reminds one of Sappho, Ca tullus and Horace united with Keats, Tennyson and Swinburne. The rythmical flow, you will perceive, is charming, and there is such a happy blending, too, of sense with sound. There is something truly Miltonio in the stately sweep of the last line "I was educated most resplendent." It is a fit conclusion to tho grand opening outburst "I was the very beet of teachers.' But her inspira tion widens and her genius takes a higher flight when soaringly she chants: 'I thank the Lord that I can write Without Sev'ral Days' seclusion quite; Ten to Thirty Minutes is all I ask To write from Three to Seven Verse Task." This is absolutely perfect. Since Homer and Dante there has been scarcely anythingto equal, it in the dash and gloom. The piety and gratitude, too are above praise. Her Muse is evidently deeply religious, and there is a" very tender sadness in those gracefully flowing lines where in she contemplates death and directs her own funeral. Hear the dying swan as she pours out her lofty soul in strains of richest, most entrancing melody: "Bury me in Jsckaon Cemetery, a very beautiful place. Let the officiating Minister be the Rector of Grace Catholic Protestant Episcopal Church, of Hoaesdale, Pa. The Bard of Shanty Hill, whose Fame shall never fade away." Why cannot the barren South pro duce a genius like that ? Senator Coke, of Texas, has also spoken in the Senate in opposition to the bankers and money lenders and in favor of silver and the bor rowers. He is one of the ablest men in public life. In real mental power and grasp we doubt if he has a supe rior in the Senate. His speeches read like the great speeches of forty years. ago, except they are unadorned and unrhetorical. We have no doubt that he spoke for silver with the same lucidity; compactness, vigor and logical precision that he did in opposition to the : dangerous Blair bill. When we have seen his speech we may have more to! say. J After a great deal of effort on the part of Senator Vance the Senate has at last passed a resolution to proyide duplicates of the official letter books that were stolen by the Yankees from the Governor's Office at Raleigh in 100&. After the lapse of twenty years the North manifests a sufficient return of reason and fairness to agree to furnish copies not the originals. mind youKf . tbe: paioined doou- ments. -It is never too late to. try to do a decent thing and repair an in- - So John Sherman, the imost de praved and wickedest man in the Se nate has been re-elected, j He is a brainy fellow and at "bottom is as destitute of honoris a marsh mos quito is of conscience. TUB PERIODICALS. - Babyhood is the very magazine that every" mother and all who have care of infants and snail children need. It is well adapted to the end sought. Price 15 cents a num ber. Leroy M. Hale, M. D., Medical Edi tor, and Marion Harland, editor of General Nursery Topics Babyhood Publishing Co., 18 Spruce Street, New Tork. Th$ Sanitarian for January opens with a paper on the "Health of the United States Army," followed by a paper on "Health of the United States Navy." There is an ad dress by James E. Reeves, M. D., Presi dent of the American Public Health Asso ciation on tho "Value of Sanitation in its National Aspect as compared with other public interests." Another paper is "Pas teur's Latest Hydrophobia Prevention," by T. P. Corbally, M. D. There are other papers of value, editorial discussion, tabljs of mortality, &c An excellent publica tion, price $4 a year. Dr. A. N. Bell, edi tor. Published at 113 Fulton Street, New York. CURRENT COMMENT. A good many Democrats are to be excused if they do not believe in a reform which is championed by such transparent hypocrites as Eugene-Hale, the New York Tribune and the Boston Journal. Tho re form itself is thoroughly established, and there is no fearof its overthrow. Its development, . tfowever, "may be greatly delayed by the false impres sions which cunning Republican par tisans are permitted to give of the in tent of the law. So long as these people fill the Congressional Record and the newspapers with their clamor against the removal of Republican partisans, so long will a large number of Democrats believe that the effect of the law is to keep their old and offensive opponents in place. And the only answer will be the dismis sal of Republican officers by the President. Boston Post, Civil Ser vice Organ: The boycotting of new and unpopular Democratic oostmasterR is said to be increasing instead of di- minismng. mere are now over 300 cases of the kind, and manv of the j men who imasrined themselves snug ly ensconced in fat berths have to p . iace an entirely new situation. Phil. Press. This is a sad illustra tion of the office-holding greed of the Republican party. . Not content with administering the postoffices for twenty-nve years, entire Republican communities now combine to punish tne new uemocratio postmasters by refusing to buy stamos of them. This is not a big business, but it will encourage a great many people to continue -tne worK or Keeping the Republicans out of office who are already out and may really stimulate the movement to turn out those who are yet in. Such is human nature. N. Y. World, Dem. Senator Vance does not be lieve in the present methods of civil service reform. The New York Times does. Mr. Vance has intro- duced a bill in the Senate providing iortne repeal of the Uivil Service law, and the Times, anticipating a speeoh from him on the Bubject, de clares, with a remarkable claim to foreknowledge, that "it will contain much vulgarity, and much that a Senator of this generation ought to be ashamed of, but it will not be dull." This is mugwumpery run mad. What excuse can this public journal give for branding beforehand as vulgar a speech not a line of which has ever come under its eye ? If Mr. Cleveland's recent letter, so denunciatory of newspapers, had been properly modified in justice to many newspapers in the country, it might still have included the Times, which seems so fond of hurling jag ged phrases at those whose opinions happen to differ from its own. But civil servioe reform does not mean the retention in office of Re publican partisans simply because they happened to hold places when a Democratic President was installed. Yet some of those who have been loudest in advocacy of reform have been those who have sinned most grievously against it. Richmond State, Dem. THJH THREAT OF THE NA TIONAL, BANKS. N. Y. Sun. Senator; McPherson, in- his other wise feeble reply to Senator, Beck's speech on the silver question, makes one significant remark. After re hearsing the srale and thoroughly baseless prophecy that the continued coinage of the silver dollar will na turally cause a contraction of the currency and a consequent financial panic, he goes on to say: j "The national banks, which now furnish a larsre oroDortion of nnrmr. culatingmedium would, in self-preservation, assist greatly in the inevi- wuirauuon m snort, antici pate it. Thev would snrrandpi' nir. culatioo, redeem and take in gold the poiuium upon me oonas pledged to make good their notes, and bank, if at all, upon the issues ot the Trea sury or the Mint. From these two causes alone. - to kv rmt.h?n nf kA hoarding of gold by private citizens, me enect upon our industries-would be frightful" j Were not the aillinAM nf t.M t.lt- equalled by its l malignity, it would not be worth noticing. - The circu lation of the national bank ia nnm. about' $200,000,000." .None of the i bonds pledged for the redemption 1 of it can be withdrawn, exoeot noon the deposit, in the Treasury "of the identical notes issued by each' bank, or oi ; an equal amount, of lawful money. ; 1 he banks - could not": get in their own vnotes, and they would not deposit the. gold ; now in their. vaults; because they 'would want to keep it. j They would resort either to silver or to legaL tenders. ..Now, the total amount of silver dollars and of silver certificates in actual circulation in the country is. about $135,000,000, of gold about $20,000, 000, and the entire issue of legal tenders is only about $346,000,000, making no allowance for notes lost or destroyed. Consequenty in order to withdraw their pledged bonds, the banks would have to annihilate $300,000,000 out of the existing $800,0001,000 of uational circulating medium. What the premium on the bonds would be after this catastro phe, and what they would sell for, it is not necessary to demonstrate. They simplv could not be sold at all. i j for there would not be enough money left to buy them with. Gold, accord ing to senator Mcpherson, would mostlv be either hoarded or ex nor t ed, and only $500,000,000 of gold, silver and paper money -together would remain for the business wants of 60,000,000 people. Supposing, . therefore, the Presi dents and directors of the national banks to possess the smallest Dossible amount of common sense, they ffill not even attempt to do what Senator McPherson threatens on their behalf. But experience shows that this is by no means a Bate assumption. There is no measuring the depth of the stu- piuity uor me wiiuness or tne msan ity that may possees a bank mana ger's mind when he fancies that he sees an impending pecuniary loss. THE RADICALS AND IRE LAND London Truth. Looking to the future of tho Rad ical oause I am convinced that it is of paramount importance to settle lrisn matters in a manner satisfatory to the Irish. If we do not wo shall have to embark on a career of re pression; our position will be like what was that of Austria to Tjom bardy, and what is that of Russia to r-oi an a. row, which party is the better fitted for such a policy? Ob viously the Conservatives. These serpents are wise as he of Eden. They know this. Whenever Radical measures are likely to pass their game has been to drag us into for eign complications. This is the basis of Jingoism. Ireland thev now look to as their trump card. Thev ask for nothiug better than to re main eternally in office, and eternally crushing out Irish feehncr and asDi- rations. They are well aware that, so long as this Irish question is un settled, it will so occudv ns that w shall not be able to give effect to naaicai;reforms. Do I blame them? Not in the least. On the contrarv. T admire their sagacity. Those whom x oiame are tne rtadicals and Libe rals, who allow themselves to be humbugged in so very simple a fash ion. A WISE BOY. Detroit Free Press. For an hour yesterday forenoon a woman walked up and down the taaies ' waiting room at the Third street station in her efforts to hush the screama and veils of a child about j 2 years old. The little one was bopping mad about something, and could not be soothed hv unft. words or sticks of candy. There nnauy came a moment when every body saw the mother's face take on a look of grim determmationy and at that moment a newsboy who had been warming himself at a register broke for out doors "What's the row?" asked one of his outside f nends as he joined them. "There's a woman in there goin' to spank her young 'un." "Why didn't yori stop and see the fnn ?" . . "Um ! 'Spose I want to be hauled up as a witness in an assault and battery case and have the lawyers givin me sags ?" OUR ST AXE CONTEOPOBABIBS. The subject of diversification, too. has been treated copiously in these columns. We don't nronose tn let nr. nr. th. our farmers become in a measure indeDend- cm ui wsuuiui iuu wesiior tneir pro visions for man and beast. And this brings us, by a logtcal sequence, to the absorbing question of crop liens. So long as our farmers cultivate an exclusive crop, to the utter neglect of home supplies, so long will they flounder in the mire of ad versity. When a mac mortgages his fu ture he may rest assured his mortgagee culates the many vicissitudes and exigencies uiat compass auuui ine mating of the crop and makes the usual high charges for ex tremely hazardous risks Tarboro South erner: Rev. Dr. Curry, who has been appointed Minister to Snain. is said eral hundred thousand dollars. Mr. Cleve land had better leave thn in their proper calling. We never knew a preacher who dabbled in politics and public affairs while preaching the Gospel, who did not get smirched "sooner or later." Char lotte Democrat. Mr.' Walter H. Page and Mr. are still in favor of civil service reform. we suppose tneir entire administration will be run on that line, nn mtr Kn long It takes. Clinton Caucatian. Everv morninc a.t. . rtViwL- a w o v v.w, c hslmn trne tn h cr mnm Jam k. o - - - - vvu. uvui iu tuc VyLIU tinental Hotel and knocks, and at 6 o'clock Mits Anderson ia -out nn tha u k. S., "w aTOn iu bug EraV llltht IN TTlM WMW liiin nn ha, early mass. Sheo'ever miiserattendine. never mind now cold or stormy the weath er. PA.JDm.. - .... .tojj ttuuw bXlD manacempnt of Tjipntinnnt.lmTa.Mn. t heimer; is growing, right op alongside the other New York dailiet-and strengthening everv dav. L Th fls lituit,w. . -v L has wanted fora long time a ? Democratic read with confidence and intoroat i mM Herald. I T tr I? r: A ' t?n CT Ml? wet a int'j t-je ii.-' a lit V FfiOII ALL PARTS OF THE W01 , j FOREIGN. Political Amatitr in Pranee-Clanse tPnll BXlBlter-to Ln4ofe -and Wasblnston. : - ! iBr Cable to the Hornins Star i, Paris, Jan. 14. President GreVy has signed a decree granting amnesty to per sons convicted of political offences since 1870. and reducing the sentences of many offenders against the common law. I Madrid, Jan. 14. Count Roscou has been appointed Spanish Minister to Lon don. in place of Marquis De Casa Laigta lesea, who has been transferred to Wahi ington. - OHIO. . Destructive - Fire' In Rlllleraknrs:- j Heavy LOsa. Bv Telejrrapb to the Morning star Pittsbtjro, - Pa., Jan. 14. A dispatch from Millersburg, Ohio, received last night, sijs a Are broke out in the large hardware and tin establishment of Voorheea & Eler, on Main street, late last night. It is burn ing fiercely, and fears are entertained that the entire block, including the Central Hotel and a number of fine business build ings, will succumb to the flames. The less will be heavy. FIRE ON SHIPBOARD, i Damage to a British steamer at New port News. I By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Baltimore, Jan. 14 A special from Newport News, Va., says a fire broke out on board the British steamer Matthew Bedlington, loading with cotton for Liver pool. It is supposed to be all out, but there is considerable damage. TWINKLINGS. -r- nioienng ine asylum lor ine briates, he asked: "Do you treat drunk ards here ?" "Yes. 8ir." "Well, I'm one. Where's yer bar ?" Chicago Netos. A Chicago man has read Web ster's and Worcester's dictionaries through eleven times to rest his brains, and says it is most fascinating recreation. Spring field Union. The forfeit list in England has just been published and the only defaulter in the Two Thousand Guineas is Mr. Walton, the former plunger. He is also a defaulter in the St. Leeer. The Hour. A Louisville preacher, who has no late night work away from home, calls for ; a tax of $100 on pistols. A better scheme would be to raise the price of whiskey to $100 a drink. LouistiUe Courier-Journal. West Point, N. Y., Jan. 12. The semi-annual examination of the corps of cadets has just been brought to a close, and resulted in two members of the second class, fourteen of the third and thirteen of the fourth class being found diflcient and relegated to civil life. Special to the World. 3LITVTE. XiiivrTn. 1800 BBLS" ROCKLAND LIMB, i BEST QUALITY, ; FOR SALS. 8KND IN TOUB ORDERS. 8 tf WORTH At WORTH, CARLTON HOUSE Warsaw, Duplin Comity, H. C, j QN L1NB OF WILMINGTON AND WELDON Railroad, 56 miles from Wilmington. Table always well supplied with the best the ooantry affords. Rates of Board very reaaona ble. H. J. CARLTON. deo 31 D&Wtf Proprietor- Truly, PHE LARGEST, BEST AND CHEAPEST STOCK OP HANDKERCHIEFS IN THE CITY. Exqnl8lte Styles In JEWELRY, cheap. ! POSITIVE BARGAINS In every class of Goods. de l?tf JOHN J. BSDftlCK. IMPORTANT ! A NEW AND VALUABLE DEVICE ! A PATENT Water Closet Seat ! FOR THE CORE OF HEMORRHOIDS, (Commonly called "PILES,") Internal or External, and prolapsus anl for Chil dren or Adults. Rp MEDICINE OR SURGICAL IOPERATION NECESSARY. o j i1? Invented a SIMPLE WATER CLOSET SEAT, for thA mrtt nt tha aWrvn ,.vl.. and painful malady, which I confidently place iajjuid iu vuuug BJB m i i ! ' SURE RELIEF AND CURE ! It haa boon omAnnmA hw tha laoino Physicians In North Carolina. Is now being test- wim me auopiuuB vi new xora. rnuaaoiprua and Baltimore, and we are satisfied the result wui uuwwrjr, as it nag never laiiea else where. . You can write to any of the Physicians orpromment citizens in Edgecombe Co., N. C. These Seats will ba fnrnfahAsI f tha MIt, wuw n UJUE orloes WALNUT, Polished, 18.00 1 Dlsoount to Physi CHERRY, . i 6.00 V clolans and to the POPLAR, - - 6 00) Trade. Directions for using will accompany each Seat. We trouble vnn with nn narUnnatM Wa la.m the Seat to be its own advertiser. Address Lfiwis chamberlain Patentee, . rarboro, Bdgeoombe Co., N. C. Ivl? D&Wt i YELLOW! TOBACCO! THE HONET CROP FOR THE FARMER ArA vnn irntnv fn AnlrfvofA fArteyiMA 4-V Tf nn. si An H 1 nn tA thn nitvnvpfirtv noi t TjTE A If. 0.nH VAT! nH11 mnalvA tha navw el-r mAnrk. giving toll lnstraotions how to onltl ate and ma- jmko iuo crop, Koceuier wun a paoxage 01 l l BACCO SEED, (two varieties, the Wnite-stem Oronoko and Hester), seleoted with an eye to t llAfp Wfl)l ajtantatimv r. tha. anil r.t North Carolina, and best suited lor the finest vjym ui uriKui. uuo uuruu. 1 HftrlTlnlno- with thn nlanf-VutA aytA fnllnntn. . all through its varioas stages as the orop advan ces, the GOLD LEAF aims to be a true guide to the new beginner, and a valuable aid.to .he ex perienced grower of this most profitable of all money crops. Now Im thn ttmn fi anKanvflva f vn gin with the crop at the right time JanSD&Wtf Henderson, N. C. The Eobesonian. Published every Wednesday In Lumberton, N. C CyW.W, ncDIARMEO, eort bert to Robeson oounty alone, beside a gen eral circulation in the counties of MooreTcqm- BLD - tTAS THE -LAEGE8T CIRCULATION AND THE tn thn fSsL l - i, ...i - : .5- . f r i-r '5-f . 1 i v. WILMINGTON MARKET " STAR OFFICE, Jan. 14, 4 P. .M. SPIRITS TURPJENTINE Quoted firm at S5 cents per gallon. No sales; the receipts of the day being only 10. casks. ROSIN The market was quoted firm at 75 cents per bbl for Strained and 80 cents for Good Strained. : TAR The market was . quoted firm at $1 00 per bbl. of 280 lbs, with sales of re ceipts at these figures. CRUDE TURPENTINE-Market steady at $1 50 for Virgin and Yellow Dip and $1 00 for Hard. COTTON Market firm. Sales reported of 50 bales at 8f cents per Q for Middling. The following were the official quotations Ordinary ftj cents $ lb Good Ordinary. 7 9-16 " Low Middling, 8f " " Middling 8 Good Middling 9 RICES Market steady and unchanged. We quote: Rough: Upland 80cts$l 00 per bushel; Tidewater $1 001 15. Clean Common 44f cents; Fair 4i5J cents; Good 55J cents; Prime 5i5j cents; Choice 66 cents per D. TIMBER Market steady, with sales as folio ws; Prime and Extra Shipping, first class heart, $9 0010 00 per M. feet; Extra Mill, good heart, $6 508 00; Mill Prime, $6 006 50; Good Common Mill, $4 00 5 00; Inferior to Ordinary, $3 004 00. PEANUTS Market steady at 81 cents for Prime, 35 cents for Extra Prime, and 8940 cents for Fancy, per bushel of Cii IDS. RECEIPTS. Cotton Spirits Turpentine Rosin Tar Crude Turpentine 32 bales 10 casks 760 bbls 43 bbls 90 bbls OOITIESTIC MARKETS iBy Telegraph to the Morning, 8tar. Financial. New York. January 14, Noon. Monev easy at H2 per cent. Sterling exchange oot(Ho. oiaie Donas neglected. Gov ernments dull but steady. Commercial. Cotton teadv. with salfta tn-riav rf 171 bales; middling uplands 9 5-16c: middling Orleans ftje. Futures dull but steady, with sales at the following quotations: January 9.28c; February 9.29c; March 9.39c; April 9.5lc; May 9.61c; June 9.72c. Flour dull and heavy. Wheat better. Corn better. Pork dull at $10 0010 50. Lard steady .a. itti n . . ..... J ai o d pints turpentine steady at 88c Rosin steady at $1 001 05. Freights firm. Balttuobb, January 14. Flour quiet J ctr - tm - anu oc on on nign graaes oi city mills. Wheat Southern entirely nominal- wpot- ern higher and dull j sout hern red 9093c; amoer aay7c; jno. l Maryland 92c bid; No. 2 western winter red on spot 8686tC Corn southern higher: western ataariv nH quiet; southern white 4751c; yellow 47 U1C. !Sv Cable to the Morning Star.) Livskpool. January 14, Noon Cot ton steadv. with a fair riemMnn- miHHlinn uplands 5 l-16d; middlinsr Orleans 5id; sales 10,000 bales; for speculation and ex- port i.uw oaies; receipts 8,000 bales, 7, 900 of which were American; yesterday's sales were increased by late business by 1,000 bales Egyptian "cotton. Futures quiet; uplands. 1 mc, January and February delivery 4 63-643 62-64d; February and March delivery 463-64d; March and April delivery 5 l-64d; April and May delivery 5 4-645 3-64d; May and June delivery 5 7-645 -64d ; July and August delivery 5 13-645 12-64d; August and September delivery 5 16-64d. 2 P. M. Good uplands 5 5-16d; mid dling uplands 5 l-16d; low middling 4 13-1 6d; good ordinary 4fd; ordinary 4Jd. Good middling Texas 5 5-1 6d: middling Texas 54d: low middling A 1S1ftrl. nwrwi ordinary 4 ll-16d ; ordinary 4d. Good mid dling Orleans 5id; low middling 4 15-16d; good ordinary 4 ll-16d; ordinary 4d. Sales of cotton to-day include 7,700 baies American. 5 P. M. Uplands, 1 m c, January de livery 4 62-64d, sellers' option ; January and February delivery 4 62-64d, sellers' option: February and March delivery 4 63-64d, sell ers' option; March and April delivery 5 7-64d, sellers' option ; April and May jde- livery 5 3-64d, buyers' option May and June delivery 5 664d,buyers' Option; June and July delivery 5 9-64d, buyers' option; July and August delivery 5 12-64d, buy ers' option; August and September deliv ery 5 15-64d, buyers' option. Futures closed quiet and steady. London, Jan 14, Noon Consols, money 99 15-16; account 100. New TorM Rice market. N. Y. Journal of Commerce, Jan. 13. Rice-The countenances of all the deal ers were bevming today, each giving the report that the demand had been active for domestic sorts. The tone of the market is strong all holders claiming that the do mestic sorts are so far below equal grades in the foreign that they cannot decline and are sure to advance. In these times of dullness and depression it is quite refresh ing to hear the varied expressions of confi dence among the rice men. One says "the trade are fools if they do not stock up to the nozzle at these prices' Another, more dignified, says that -"prices on medium grades are nearly lc. per pound lower than they have been at any time since 1860." Prime and choice styles are scarce. High grade foreigns continue to sell freely; lower sorts are dull. Following are the latest reported quotations: Carolina and Louisiana common to fair 8i3ic; fair to good at 4i4ic: good to prime 5f5c; choice to head at ftlOriV Ran Ctffn nnlil . . 4f4ic; bond at 2c; Patna at 4&4Jc; savannah Rlee SfarKet. Savannah News, Jan. 13. xue maxKet continues dull and inactive. There is some inquiry for the better grades, with, very little offering. The sales for the day were only 86 bbls. The follow ing are the Official nnntatinn, A T j ttougn rice Country lots 8595c: tide water $1 001 20. ' Hae The Blue Ridge Baptist ORGAN OF THE BAPTISTS OF WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA. Joseph E. Carter, Editor, & Proprietor. '-: ' ' "- 4;,; ; IRta a - m " : - ' - thS KSfdS0 'oanua tiSTn wnuwjuuj,,' . . west of pniwie. m worr, consecrated la in : COWTACIQUS Oseases are Prcvajent all over the World I am a native of England, and while I was in that country I contracted a terrible blood poi son, and for two years was under treatment as an out-door patient at Nottingham Hospital, En gland, but was not cured I suffered tha most agonizing pains in mv bones, and was covered wlrh sores all over my b-jdy and limbs. 1 had vertigo and deafness, with partial loss of eight, severe pains in my head and eyes, etc., which nearly ran me crazy. I lost all hope in that coun try and sailed for Amer'ca, and was treated at Roosevelt in this city, as well as by a prominent physician - in New York havlDg no connection with the hospitals. ' I saw the advertisement of Swift's Specific, and I determined to give it a trial as a last re sort. I bad given up ail hope of being cured, as I had gone through the hands of the best medi cal men in Nottingham anLew York I took six bottles of 8 S 8., and I can say with great joy that they have cured me entirely. I am as sound and well as I ever was in my life. L. FKRD HALFOBD. New York City, June 12th, 1885. BLOOD Is the life, and he. is wise who remember s it But in March of last year (1E84),. I oomraoted blood poison; and being in Savannah. Ga , at the time, I went into the hospital there for treat ment. I suffered very much from rheumatism at the same time. I did not get well under the treatment there, nor was I cured by any of the usual means I have now taken Seven bottles of Swift's Specific and am sound and well It drove the poison out through bolls on the kin. Dah Lkaet. Jersey City, N. J.. Aug. 7, 1885. Two years ago I contracted blood poison. Af ter taking prescriptions from the best pbrslcins here and at Dallas, I concluded to visit Hot Springs, and on reaching Texarkana a doctor re commended me tot-y swift's Speolnc, assuring me that it would benefit me more than Hot Springs. Although the had produced great holes in my back and chest, and had removed all the hair off my head, yet I began to improve in a week's time, and the sores began to heaL and were entirely gooe inside of eight weeks. WnxJonxs, Porter Union Pass. Depot. Cisco, Texas, July IS, 1885. Treatise on Blood and 8kjn Diseases mailed free. . THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawers, Atlanta, Ga. N. Y. 157 W. 23d St. jan 80 D&Wlv fr su we nrm ch w TUTT (POLL c 3 v 25 YEARS IN USE. The Greatest.Medical Triumph of the Age! SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. IiOaa of appetite. Bowel a costive, Pain ia the head, with a dull eensation In tho back part. Pain under the honlder biade, Fullness after catinsr, with a dis inclination to exertion of body or mind. Irritability of temper Iow spirits, with a feeling of having neglected some doty, Weariness Dizziness, Flattering at the Heart, Dots before the eyes, Hoadacho -ever the right eye. Restlessness, with fltfol dreams, Highly colored Urine and. CONSTIPATION. TUTT'S PIXXS are especially adapted to such cases, one close effects such a change of feelingastoastonisli the sufferer. They Increase tne Appetite, and cause tha body to Take on Klesti. thus the system is nourished, and by tneir Tonic Action on the Oigestive Ortranc,!! rerrUax Stools ara produced. Price 85c. 4 Mnrray St..IV.Y. TUTT'S EXTRACT SiRSAPARILLfl Renovates the body, makes healthy flesh, strengthens tha weak, repairs the wastes or the system with pure blood and hard muse!; tones the nervousi system, invigorates the brain, and imparts tno vigor of manhood. SI . Sold by dnisrfrists. FEICE 44 Murray St., Now York JanS3D&Wlv suwefr jan 80 EALEIGH REGIBTEB. By P. M. HALE Printer :to tie State. Subscribe to your Home Paper and pay for it and then remit $3 to pay for your State Democratic Paper the Raleigh Register. Each new subscriber remitting $2 direct, is entitled to the Risisteb for one year, anl to Webster's Practical Dictionary, which, until August 1, 18S5, is offered as a Pre mium. Sample copies of the Register mailed on ap plication. Address RALEIGH REGISTER, my 80 DAWtf Kalelrh. N. C. THE LANDMARK. published at STATES VILLE, IREDELL CC N. C - ' ' " ' IS THE Leading Newspaper in Western ITortli Carolina. It is the only Democratic Paoer onbUshed !i. Iredell County one of the largest and wealthiest oounties in the State and has attained n. Urimr local circulation than any paper ever heretofore pupusnea m tne oounty. Its circulation In Alexander. Wilkea. Ash a. a ne. ghany, Yadkin, Davie and Iredell, is larger thvjx that or any two papers in the State combined; and is rapidly acquiring a strong foothold In Forsytne Surry, Rowan and western Mecklenburg. It Is the onlv nftnnF in Vu.i lcrvi. n thns keep constantly before the people. TJnacr fj86 raldV moreasing circulation is tha ivotuv, man iii uiD li&AliUAS THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDiUM i ERN NORTH CAROLINA. Address "LANDMARK, . - StatesvUle N. The Biblical .Recorder PUBLISHED BY Edwards, Broughton & Co. RALEIGH, N. G. KEV. C. T. BAILEY, Editor. . REV. G. 8. FARRISS, 1 CHA8.L. SMITH. f"001"- Orni' oi Hortl Carolina Baptists- In lto 44th Tear, EVERY BAPTIST SHOULD TAKE IT As an Advertising Medium Unsurpassed. Only $3.0O Per Tear, deo t? S" BIBIICAL RECORDER, SEND FOR A MMPLEOPV?' ADVERTISE Tl merchant and Parmer PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT MARIONS O TTTH CAR OLIJNA haartS fifM Increasing circulation In the Won'orSwotSr b8St Cot4cI' wlOi Whxrl medium of communication svvHrTi ana irarmers cf this fortheBusmeMenof WUmrngtoiT eefltf - MoLUCAS, - " - I - . 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Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 15, 1886, edition 1
2
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