Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / July 21, 1886, edition 1 / Page 2
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- i - , , piibllhp' Announcement. ; I tue - . , - Ti . - - - - . . I . .. 3T : - J - - I DSISSS MOEaay.at. ' A"' ; Tl I in for one month, to maarabaortben. Delivered to i f ir any porlod from one wock to one year. ; I T2E ivEEKXtT STAB la published every mda? morning at )1 50 per year, $1 00 for six months, 60 cents lor three montna. , if-. . ADYEBTIsniQ BATES (DAILY). One sooare one day, $100; two days, $1 75 ; three days, 2 50; four days, 83 00; five days, $3 50; one week, $400; two weeks, $6 50 : three weeks $8 50; one month, $10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $24 00 ; six months. $40 00; twelve months, $60 00. Tea Uae8 of solid Nonpareil true make one square. . All aniionneenenta of faSra. festivals. Balls I Hops, Plo-Nios, Soolety Meettngs, Political Meet ,wmiaechttcedre?nradverti J VTtl J . . a.ij Ti nt nil. I Una Sot first insertion, and 15 cents per line for oaoh subeeqnent Insertion. ' r 1 advertisementa Inserted In Local Solemn at ; aay price. : j i . 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Where an advertiser contracts for she paper to be sent to him during the time his advertisement Is In, the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his ad dress. - he Morning Stan . by william h. bernard. Tuesday Evening, July 20, 1886. EVENING EDITION. OLEOMARGARINE IN THE SENATE The oleomargarine debater in the Senate Opened richly. It was very spicy and personal, as well as funny and pointed. "Senator Vance made an amusing speech as well as a very sensible speech. The Stab has usu ally been able to see public questions as the Senator sees them.; It only fought him on the Blair bill, and it will always remain with us an inex plicable mystery how one so prone to fall back on the Constiution in his discussions as he is could have ever taken the view he did of the Blair Grab bill. The - Stae thinks the Senator is precisely right; when he attacks the great crushing War Tariff; -when he stands up for the peopl against the Pluto crats of Wall Street in the fight be tween gold and silver; when he fa vors the reduction of the surplus in the Treasury; when he delivers'' such well aimed and effective blows at the monumental fraud of" the age rthat British' system of life - tenure that only serves to keep: small .Republi cans m office whilst turning "out the big fellows that system that is ut terly hostile to the genius of Ameri can institutions and that is intended to bamboozle the unsuspecting and the innocent; and when he protests against class legislationagainst a bill that is only less violative of the Constitution than the Paternal Peda gogy billfis, and that will set a pre cedent that shall lead to most dan gerous results. i!,: 1 Senators Vance and Butler insisted that the oleomargarine bill ! was un constitutional or extra-constitutional; that it had literally "camped out side", of the Constitution.! This ob jection was urged by the Stab in all ff if a r lanncoi Art a onrl if a ilnnvnuo -Ah I . .. .ro0ufiC10WC.c emphasized time and again. : That was a terrible blow to the pretensions of the dairymen when 1 .! r used in butter i- - ,T ! , V iua-ius in ine xonn was Drougnt - , , 0 . ,, . 5 ; out, first, by Senator Butler, and then by Senator Ingalis, of Kansas, with f so much of cutting severity. The llatter Senator exhibited a vial of coloring matter prepared in Ver mont, the pious State of the saintly Edmunds. It is a liquid that pledges to add five cents a pound to the value of white butter. We begin to understand why so much of the so-called choice butter from Northern creameries is bo deep ly colored. The too receptive stom ach has accepted this compound, - taking the "flattering unction'1 to it self that it was golden butter from yrange county, New York, or some aQd persons which aro at once surprising other equally favored section when natui?V atro-ly individual in them p'ywv. v Becuon wnen selves, yet in perfect accordance with the lo I it was poor, cheap stuff all col- tvPes of reality, then it is impossible to L j 1 -v : t . denv Rrsott tha oreu uy ttu iugcuious lankees from the State of the railroad, attornev Senator; Ingalis did the counter service in brb-ine out th w wA4 . " ' tt" ' . . 1 two men who were coacnmg tne anti - oleomargarine and butterine.bill of tne IWO 0U8e8 Were, .argoty cu- ffaffe(j , in manufacturing so-called ; I hnttpr and we have no doubt color- ed with the Vermont liquid. When When a liquid that costs $l'can color 2,000 alone has created humorous charac pounds and enhance its sale 5 bents tiers that fairly, rival Scott. Dickens a pound equal to $100 it is useless perhaps conies next. Scott's'gallery to talk any more of "bogus butter." of TW 4T.;-n ia tonf.all t.hrnnorh the uo V""S " ; , . ' , , North poor white butter is sold for what it 19 not. ;Xt:l8 a irauq. xb. . nmn ' ;, Kofnrn;' "Wnnd. will be some time before Wood- pulp" Miller will invite an attack r , . T! from the wiry and caustic Ingalis , again. i - . ft SAnatfi if. nn; constitutional, unfair, unjust, unwise and iniquitous. It ought to be killed. and iniauitOUS. It eusht to be killed, iuiquituuD. ouj, , , I If the object was as is pretended by the manufacture and sale of all imitation compounds, the bill would be differently worded. ed out that all that should be demand ed wis that oleomargarine should be sold for what it is, and that a penal ty should be. attached to any .viola- tion oflaw in this particular; But to try to tax a commodity out of ex istence to favor another commodity , is wrong is preposterous and unjust. Let sham butter go. But the people like j oleomargarine . and it has not been proved to be hurtful to the pub- lie health. Said Senator Maxey, and his point remains unchallenged that -. . . it oleomargarine was reauy unwnoie- some then it ought not to be taxed , a xi urged that if it wa9 not unwholesome there was no more propriety in tax ing it than there would be in taxing butter, cheese,, or meat. "THE WIZARD OF THE NORTH." We close up our discussion of "What to Read" by a further refer ence to Sir Walter Scott. We would be glad to irfduce intelligent: people to read his immortal productions ra ther than spend their time in reading the ephemeral trash of the day. Lord Byron said precisely of Scott what Mr. Harrison repeats that he was a library in himself. If we were to publish a list of his poems,' novels, biographies, essays, histories, &c, this would appear, and more particu larly after the books had been care fully read. We are tempted to say a word in passing of his wonderful poetry. Within a year we have been all over it and with increased delight. The person who does not know Scott's poetry is. ignorant of one of the richest mines of delight in the' world. His poems are no less anima ted and picturesque than virile and manly and healthful. His 'Lay of the Last Minstrel" is very wonderful, very original, very splendid. It is a marvellous picture of health, of vigor, of : beauty. It is most richly decorated and abounds in exquisite description, in glorious bursts of genuine Homeric fire and in winged I words. ; Then comes the immortal group "Marmion," "Lady of the Lake," "Don Roderick," "Rokeby," "The Bridal of Tremaine,"and "Lord of the Isles." ' What a magnificent array what richness of description what heart-stirring music what lofty sentiments what noble enthu siasmwhat high 1 art and enthrall ing rhapsody what perfect reality and reproduction of the dead past ! mere is notning comparatue 10 tne aeries in this nartienlar of rehabili- tating and vivifying the past, in rich ness of desenption andHoinenc ar dor and dash since the great blind bard sang his immortal story of Troy. But as superb and interesting and fresh as Scott's poetry isj it must yield to his novelar 'His beet novels are almost poems. Prof. Shaw holds, in his exceedingly, clever work on English Literature, that the novels place him "almost on a level with Shakespeare." The tone of his novP.ifl. almOHt withont fl-kftflnt,nn ia v ' ; of ; LMifif, -A I uiauui:) ovivuji, ucaituiui auu uuulCi I xt 1 j o t I No one can read Scott without m- 11 1 , , . tellectual enjoyment and stimulant, and, without elevation of desire and purpose. Scott's perspective, is natural and his color' and proportion are only such as an inspired artist could com mand. It is no 1 wonder that all the Eiglish-ipeaking , world was-tXS-SS'lSlr carried away by the succession of brilliant,' eloquent, powerful, romant ic fictions that gave lit types of al most every variety of character, and with an art and freshness and bound ing intellectual power that swept everything before iu j Says Shaw:. 'If the highest manifestation of creative fronino ha Ih. .nAiRM crveVHni.i " y The noblest and. gentlest lessons of Wof tk c a , - i;S Y""" ana sympatny, vof -heart- " ' a" j moving painos, oi proiouuu wwuum, holiest aspiration, of elf-abnega. wbiuwio M'"Jj v .,..---y stronger than death are taagntoy the great magician, isut the inn ana humor are abounding. Shakespeare1 humor are abounding. portraits have no rivay amng writers of fiction. And then to know that the grand master of humor and, tears, of romance and chivalry, of hu man life under every phase, was so great-hearted, so generous, so genial, so lovable, so utterly free from en- vyings and strifes that he died in his 62d year without a personal enemy is enough to draw one to him if he were not the erreat author he is. Lock- hart's "Life of Scott" is the most de- kightful, as it is possibly the most masterly, biography in our language, Our advice is, read Scott, and espe- cially ;his best poetry and best nov els. Bead the stories again and again untiL you prefer them above all other fictions that the world con- tains Cranky Blair "is stilL harping up on his daughter." Having" failed in his attempted raids upon the Treas ury under the private pension claims. owing to Che fidelity, of the Presi dential " Watchdog" of the Treasury; he now offers an amendment to the Surplus Revenue .bill to provide $79,000,000 for Federal school teach ing in the States. He hopes in this way to attach to his grab scheme nn der an amended bill the Democrats and Republicans who advocate Pa ternal Pedagogy. But he will hard lv make bv his same. While we be- Heve the surplus ought to be applied to reducing the public debt and t pat I the resolution is timely and wise, we would never support the resolution when it further proposed to violate the Constitution and to allow the Centralized Government to invade the States as a school teacher. Blair admitted squarely recently that the educational bill was intended to strengthen the Republican party. Judge Gudger has many warm friends in this section who will regret his retirement but hope to find in Mr. Merrimon a woitby successor. JSew Jsem journal. If Judge Gudger discharged satis factorily the duties of his office he deserved re-election. As far as we - f know he gave much satisfaction to the people of Northeastern Carolina and through the section towards - New Bern. We . believe he was re gared aa a rather inferior judge by some lawyers in the Middle section. He is a good and true man. We do not know how able a jurist Mr. Jas. Merrimon is, but we do know that he has a very clear mind and a very terse, neat style of speech. He is in fact a man of decided ability. The Philadelphia . s American, a strong friend of Civil Service Re- form, in its issue of the 17tb, makes an admission that we commend to the attention of Gen. Cox. It says: i "The moral of this business is that the Pendleton law is a failure, as soon as any ingenious office-holder sets himself to try to break it down. The reform of the Civil Service must begin at the other end, by forbiddioe removals except for cause, and by giving every removed official the right to be heard in his own defence before some impartial tribunal." ' This is a Republican view of the matter. It is said, by the way, 'that Ohio Democrats have so little, re- gara ior toe monumental nnmoug tW the, mAvr f i " ft-n Hp man George," could not be elected con stable if at home. 1 j The Greensboro North Stale is in formed that the Stab never said that, the North Carolina Democratic plat form "did not favor the repeal of the tobacco and whiskey tax.". The Star referred to the last National Demo cratic Convention, which neither pro mised nor favored any such j un wise and unstatesmanlike legislation. There is not - a solitary Democratic naner in all the North that favors it. I r . .. ..: I : " ,. A GREAT IRISHMAN. . 1 j . Contemporary Review It may serve to give "us some dim notion Of how great . a man Burke was, of how affluent a mind, of how potent an imagination, of how. resist less ah ' energy, that even when his sole unassisted name is pitted against we are not overwhelmed by any sense of obvious absurdity or. incon gruity. I The first great fact to remember is, that the Ed mund Burke we are all agreed in re garding as! one of the proudest mem ones of the House of - Commons was an Irishman. When we . are in our next fit of political depression about that island, and : are about piously to wish, . as the poet Spenser tells us men were wishing even in his' time that it were not adjacent, let us do a little national stock-taking, and cal culate profits as well as losses. Burke -was noi oniy an: lnsnman. nut a typical one of the very kindimany ICnglishmen, and even possibly some Scotchmen, make a point of dis- liking. -I do not say that be was a aboricrinal Irishman, but - oih ances tors are said to have ; settled ; in the county of Galway, under Strongbow, in King Henry IL's time, I when Ire land was first-conquered. .'and our troubles began.! Thisf .at all events, is a T better Irish pedigree than-Mr. Parnell's. ' - , C VRBENT COMMKN T. The- Savannah wVto asserts that Georgia needs 00 help from the Federal - Government tor its educa tional system, and demands that the State "should step in and increase the public school term immediately on the assembling of the General As sembly to at least six months in the year, and levy a tax sumcient to pay the additional expense." And yet the Blair bill proposed to give Geor gia $6,500,000 on the ground that she was too poor to keep her schools open six months in the year. savan nah JVews. If we could believe that the East contained all the wise men!. in the country, and that 5 there existed no such thing as financial sense out side of Wall Street we might take some alarm at the cry of disaster and ruin that has been raised by the or gans of the capitalists because of the ad option, of the Morrison surplus re solution by the House of Represen tatives. -But the United States cover a great extent of territory and em brace vast interests besides those re presented in the counting rooms of banks and the offices7 of bondholders and brokers. When we find the representatives of those interests from all parts of that large territory favoring a certain financial poncy oy me overwneimmg anu Big- 1 nifaeant maionty of 209 to 67. or more than three to One, we are not willing to set them down as fools ignorant of the effect o their propo sition, or as' adventurers careless of the country's honor and prosperity. Hew 1 ork World, JJem. If there be any truth in the jfancy lnat when a poet dies "mute Nature mourns her worshipper and celebrates his obsequies," there will be grief in the groves and fields of the South over the death of Paul H. Hayne. All his works showed cul ture, sensibility to natural beauty and erreat refinement of feeling-. He was essentially the poet of Mature, born in Arcadia: and America has so few of this stamp that there will be a sigh of regret for one the atmosphere of whose writing-in the" words of Uayard lavlor, is "the breath 01 M.&Y"-Philadilphia Record. . No Pardon for a Man who Kobn old Soldiers. Washington Star, July 12. : The President has denied the ap plication for the pardon of James Milton, now undergoing sentence for demanding and retaining an exces- j sive fee for prosecuting a pension. lhe .President, in; passing on the case, says: "The offense for which this prisoner was convicted consisted in extorting $600 from a soldier for procuring his pension 1 when he was only entitled to $10. This crime is a serious one, and its bad consequences are far-reaching, involving extortion from soldiers who put 'themselves in the power of pension - agents and leading to criminal practice in the procurement of pensions. The peo ple who make it a7 business to pro cure pensions are often of such a character as to need all the restraint and, when guilty, all the punishment they receive." OUR STATE CONTEMPORARIES. The farmer should make, as near as pos sible, every thing which he will need on the farm In all our observation we have seen that the farmer who makes his own supplies is more prosperous than he who buys them, t here should not be a pound of anything bought that can be grown, and this diversification can be practiced without materially interfering with the cultivation of the money crop; and of what use is a money crop if it 13 all consumed by the purchase of meat, wheat, corn, hay and other necessary products r it has been anrued that these things can be nnmrmsprl 1 more cheaply than they can be produced at nome, Dut experience teacnes mat, even If this be true, the expense does not bear so heavily upon the farmer. We do not mean to say that no cotton should le made; for that is the only money crop which can be successfully raised in this section to any great extent; but in order, to get the benefit of it fully it should also be a surplus crop. weiaon JXewi. xxow mis newspaper , patron . la&es a Northern weekly, and, guided by the label on the margin, he sits down in ample time and renews his subscription by registered letter for he knows that he will not receive the journal onejlay longer than the time for which he has paid.. But the man who is ident ified with him in interests; who chronicles his joys or sympathizes in his sorrows; who was at the funeral of his aged father or mo ther, with infinite care and kind solicitude collected the facts for the obituary notice 1-; . 1 1 ,.j f . which has been laid awav for nreservation l . 4 . . .. .... . . ho Ukes the f ruits of the labor of that man's hand and brain without evincine theslicht- I est disposition to give any return for it. However, he misses the county paper, and, as nia neignoor is a suoscriDer, ne walRa every ainsrnoon aiier ; ine . arrival 01 tne tlio AAnntrv mail o n yn n n flA 1.1 n1 late news. At length the paper fails to reach there, too; and, on inquiry, his neigh- bor (who Days as he eoescvnicallv informs him that the editor attemrjled to carrv too many "aeaaneaas," ana the weight carried his head Under water. - -FayetteviUe Obser ver-Gazette. .... inrrepy jneennca. . '-J.- - : Third Round for the Wilmington Dis- tncv vi uui jucuiuuwi, uuurca, douuu: t Waccamaw circuit, at Old Dock Chapel, July 24 and 25. - - J ; Wilmington, at the Temple of " Israel, August l. . : i Onslow circuit, at the Half Moon Au gust 6. :- !- ' ' -'. -Duplin circuit, at Richlacds, August 7 and 8. - ., Topsail circuit, at Union Chapel, August 14 ana 10. . -ir- . .. -. , Carver's Creek circuit, at Carver's Creek, August 21 and 5J3. . Clinton circuit, at Johnson's Chapel, Au- trust 20 ana 27. ; Magn6lia circuit, at Bryan's Chapel, Au gust 28 ana aa. - : Brunswick circuit, at Zion, September 4 and 5.- ';'i'--L"'--''sr V. ., .. r v : - Paul J. Carbaway, -:. :-tr;:y ' ', Presiding Elder. ; THE LATEST NEWS feom:ll parts of the woeld - .? J .- d WASHINGTON .Congress Co Adjourn Sue Die on ilie 8th InsL-TIie Ueported Text oftbe New t Extiadlllon Treat; Between the Onited States and Great Britain. By Telegraplrto the Morning Star. ' Washington. July 20. The Committee on Ways and Meaua to day agreed to report f avorablv MrAiorrison resolution provid- inj for the adjournment of Congress sine die on toe 2otu dny of the present month What is saidf to be the text of the new extradition treaty between the United States and Great Britain, now .pending ia theisen ate. is Dublishcd to-day. The convention extends the provisions of Article X of the treaty of 1842 to "four crimes not therein named, as roiiows; manaiaugnter, ourgiary, embezzlement or larceny iavolvinc $50 or 10,-ncr malicious injuries to properly 4, whereby the life of any person shall De en- dangered, if such injuries constitute a crimo accorciQii to in.; laws or doiu couoines a is also Drovided that the provisions of Ar ticla X all apply to persons convicted of the crimes named rn the treaty of 1843 and the new convention, as well as to those charged before ; trial with the commission. of them. The convention is not retroact ive No surrender is to be demanded for political offence, and no trial is permitted for any other, onence man tne one ior whir.h the extradition is reauested. until the person extradited has had an opportu nity to return to the state by wnicn ne was surrendered "MEXICO. Tlie Revolution In the State of Tam-U Upas Intense Excitement Prevalent :By Telegraph to the Morning Star. 1 Galveston. ! July 20. A special to the News, from Laredo., says: intense excite ment prevails on the Mexican side of the Rio Grande concerning the status of the revolution which has broken out in the State of Tamaulipas.. The air is thick with be traced to an authentic source.! It is stated, however, on good autnomy, mat a prominent citizen of Mexico, now living in Laredo, and an active sympathizer with the present outbreak received a pipher dispatch yesterday from Tamaulipas, statin? that the revolutionists would publicly pro nounce to-day in the principal plaza-of Matamoras. If this is done it is thought bloodshed will surely follow. CALIFORNIA. The Extra Session of the LesUIature will! Elect a C. S. Senator to suc ceed Senator Hearat. hy Telegraph to the Uornlnc Star.i - Sacramento. July 20. It is asserted by many of the most prominent members of the Legislature that the extra session, which was called to consider the question of irri gation, will not adjourn without electing a U. S." Senator to succeed Senator Hearst. It is claimed that the State Constitution and the Revised Statutes of the United States compel the election of a Senator, and that the Governor, having called the Legislature (.. together, has no power to prevent it. X i - a. m The Gladstone Cabinet Decide to Place their Healsnatlons In the Hand of the Queen. (bv Cable to the Morulcu; Star.! London. July 20. The Cabinet, at a meeting this afternoon, decided to immedi ately place their resignations In the hands of the Queen. "The meeting was held at Mr. Gladstone s official residence, in Down ing street. The street was crowded with people. There was but little cheering when the decision of the Ministry became Known. Professor R. C. WORD, M. D. LL. D., Dean University of Georgia, says: "Lie big Co's Coca Beef Tonic is an invaluable preparation. Invaluable in dyspepsia, de bility; malaria, biliousness, cancer. t 1! WILL SELL BETTER ENGINES AND HAND AND POWER COTTON PRESSES for less money than you can buy elsewhere. We keep a -stock of N. Y. Beltinjr & Packing Company's manufacture of RUBBER BELT, and Alexander Brothers' celebrated LEATHER BELT, which we will sell at manufacturer's prices, i We are competitors for IKON, WOOD and COPPER WORK, and will endeavor to satisfy the wishes of all buyers In our 'line who do not pre- ier 10 sona weir money away rrom nome. ! BURR BAILEY, my 28 tf j ... Wilmington, N. C. Crab'Orchard WATER." V.?- m THELTVER. i THE KinNEVS. L THE; STOMACH. I THE BOWELS. 4 3-0 sS ?-2. i o 2.3 p a S vd M " C A POSITIVE CURE FOR 3. DYSPEPSIA. A CO N ST I PAT1 0 H, j SICKHEADACHEW 2 3 2 -- ? .! 5. Dose : One to two te&SDOonfnls. Genuine Cbab Obchard Salts in eeal- ul packaKes at 10 and it&cts. no gen liris Salts sold in bnlk. - 5 Crab Orchard Water Co., Proprs. t p - r. futxid. Manager, ouistui, y. fflh 28 D&W 6m sn we fr nao Bappahannock White Corn. I QOO BUSHELS N0W DISCHARQIng, "w l ; Ex Schooner Harry csheppard ror"5uy I T-T A T T .1 &r P I? A T? Q A I T I -f ' t 00 X J3.JXO.liA, 1 1 Jv 15 D&wtf Statement QFTHBU.tt BRANCH OF THE LONDON & LIVERPOOL & GLOBE INS. CO. ?1 Total Assets ... . ! Liabilities. $5,924,011 . ,3,334,908 Surplus.:ij.,.............$2,S89,103 Losses paid ia 1885, $2035133.: i LoBsespaid in the United States for 35 years," $37,500,000. . y All losses paid WITHOUT DISCOUNT. - J. W. Gordon & Smith. " AGENTS, -- ' No. Ill N. Water Street. . s Jy 18 tf Telephone No. 73. Wanted. 1 20,000 Lla-W001-'""15 000 Lb8BKKSWAX ; 1 A'Aft A Lbs. HIDES. - Highest 'Cash Prices paid -on delivery.- Con sianments solicited. SAMUEL BEAR, Sr -my 7tf - ; , r - . 18 Market Street. COMMERCIAL. - W I L MINGTON - MA R KE T STAR OFFICE. July 20, 4 Pi M. - SPIRITS TURPSNTINE Quoted firm at 31 cents per gallon, with phU-s reported ater of 200 Cr.fcks at 32 cf-nts. ; - . - .j RQSLN The market was quoted steady at 75 .cents per, bbl for Strained and 80 cents for Good Strained Fine Tosins are quoted at $2 00 for $2 25 lotM, $2 50 for N, $2 75 for W G, and $3 00 for W W. TAR The market was quoted firm at. $1 30 per bbl of. 280 lbs. . . CRUDE TURPENTINE--Market firm at $1 80 for Virgin, $1 70 for Yellow Dip and 75 cts for; Hard. ' . : COTTON-lMarket firm on a basfs of 9 cents for Middling. No -sales. The fol lowing are tbcj official quotations: Ordinary... .J..j..L...i 68 cental tt. Good Ordinary. J . 7f " Low Middling.. I. ..i... 8 y-16 Middling.....!.. 14... . 9 " Good Middling... i.... 9 5-16 - RICE Market steady and unchanged. We quote; Rough; Upland 80cts$l 00 per bushel; Tidewater $1 001 15. Clean: Common 4J4f cents; Fair 4J5 cents; Good 55J (cents; Prime 5i5f cents; Choice 6i6i cents per lb. . . ' TIMBER Market steady, with sales as foUows; Prime and Extra Shipping, first class heart, $9 0010 00 per M. feet; Extra Mill, good hearth $6 508 00; Mill Prime, 6 006 50; Good Common Mill, $4 00 5 00; Inferior to Ordinary, $3 004 00. PEANUTS-l-Market firm. Prime 4045 cents; Extra Prime 5055 cents; Fancy 60 cents per bushel of 28 lbs. , RECEIPTS. .1.: Cotton. ... . 00 bales 348 casks Spirits Turpentine. . . Kosin H...-- Tar........ Crude Turpentine 397 bbls 25 bbls 180 bbls. DOMESTIC fllAR RETS tBy Telegraph! to the Morning Star.l j Financial. Nbw YobkJ July 20, Noon. Money dull, heavy and easy at li2 per cent. Sferlinff exchange 486 and 487. State bonds dull and steady. Government "secu rities quiet. j 'p - ! (JommercidL ; Cotton dull I and easy.; sales to-day of 132 bales: middling uplands 9ic; middling Orleans 9 11-1 6c futures quiet and steady; sales to-day at the following quotations: July 9.37c: August y.4lc; September a.sfc: October 9.26c; November 9.25c ; December 9.27c Flour auiet and unchanged. Wheat iic lower, i Corn opene.d i$c lower. Pork opened fjtteadv at S10 5010 02. Lard dull at $6 S2. Spirits turpentine firm at 34 cents. Koein steady at $ 1 0U1 05, Freights steady. Baltimore July 20. Flour quiet and steady: Howard street and western super t3 50012 90: extra $3 003 C5: family $3 754 50; city mills super $2 503 00; extra S3 25&4 00: Kio brands S4 DU4 Wheat souther a firm and quiet; western higher and quiet southern red 8587c; southern amber 8789c; No. 1 Maryland 86c asked: No. 2 western winter red on spot 85c. Corn southern nominal; west ern easier and dull ; southern white 48 50c; do yellow 4850c. rORBIGN BIARKET8. (By Cable to the Moraine Star. L-vrbpool.: July 20, Noon. Cotton dull, with prices generally in buyers' favor: middling uplands 5d; middling Orleans 5 516d: sales to-dav of 5,000 bales; for speculation and export 500 bales; receipts 10.0UO bales, 5. sou oi which were American Futures dull: Uplands, 1 m c, July and August delivery 5 13-64d; August and Sep tember delivery '5 13-64d; September and October delivery 5 9-64d; October; and November delivery 5 5 64d; November and December delivery 5 4-64d; December and January delivery 5 4-64cu Sales of cotton to-day include 4,600 :aios American, j . " : . ' New York Rice Market. N. Y. Journal of Commerce, July 19 Rick Meets with1 a verv fair demand. and firm. The following are the quotations Carolina and Louisiana1 common to low fair at 3J3fc; fair to low good at 4Sl4c; good to prime at 56c; choice to head at 6i7c i Rangoon, duty paid, at 4t4ic; bond at 2ic; Fatna at 4fc; Java at 5ic. -. - 1 1 -;;:'; '- ; - Charleiton Ulc inarKet. Charleston News and .Courier, July 19. : Rice The market was active and firm to day, and sales of 511 ; barrels were made. The quotations were; Common 3i3fc; fair 3i4c; good 4i&4Jc; prime 55c. A LICHTIMIIMC ! F IRE INSURANCE POLICIES WILL BE IS sued by the! undersigned, covering loss or dam . : i f ' . T" fr-i- -. Vs. i age by llithtnlng, without extra charge. M.' S. WILLARD, . 214 N.; Water St! '' -Jylltf Telephone No. & Atkinson & 'Uanning's Insuranec Rooms, : NO. 113 NORTH WATER STREET, illmlnston N. Cm ; r Fire, Marine', ana . Life", CoipaMss, Aggregate Capital Represented Over $1000D,KO. ie li ir i BOSTON POST, S THE OLD, IN VINCIBLE AND THOROUGHLY TKUJt BLiUJS USa. HXWSPAFRR. The clean Family Newspaper of Massachusetts. Containing the mot complete news of any paper Is New England. The Boston Dally Post is especially noted for its reliable uonunercau and Financial Features. SUBSCRIPTION BATES. ' , ! . Dailt One Year, 9; Six Months, f 4J5P; In ad- Tanoa. - - - i Wm.T Frtdatb $1.00 per Year to advance; oix vKipiea ior o.wu. . ' i"J s - CLUB RATES. ... 1 . Five or more to one address wtii be furnished as follows : - t . DALLY POST at $3.00 per year per oepy; Ten conies for 27. 50 each, in advance. . : r. WEEKLY POST at f 1.00 per year 'per copy ui vinos oi Eire r mere, one copy wiujoe iny nl I.Wtf . . ' r The Home Journal, - PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING At CTaxrentonu N. C. " '', ; . ' joira w. yiTCKs ' EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. ' '-1 has a splendid circulation m the comities of Warren. Vanoe. Halifax. N. C and Mecklenburcr. Va. As an advertising medium it Is nnsnrpassecL, - Terms ai.oo a year in aavanon. Aaoress . THE HOME JOURNAL, j . . Warrenton. N. C. aplStf Is a daaseroDa as well aa diBtraesmg complaint. If oegjeotoa, it tends, by impaitinc nutrition, and de resKiiHf thetoacg the ayBtem, to prepare tiie way nnnvr,rs THE QESIT01IIC ?. ' Havina used Brown's Iron Bittern tnr KL' is !-! V"" jupooure in recom mending xt highly. Also consider it a splendid ton in and invigorator, and very BtrengtheninK." HOJ. JOSJSPH O. 8TJIT, Judge of Circnit Com Clinton Co., Ind., says: " I bear most cheerfal tesJi mony to the efficacy of Brown's Iron Bitters fn Dyspepsia, and aa a tonic." -Genuine has above Trade Mark and croesed red HnH nil Tr,Ho T . D. Molasses. "TEW CROP CUBA, PORT6 RICO, . J- . I .- and NEW OUTHfAKTa For sale by J,. - o - ADRIAN &VOLLERS,' aplll tr S. E. cor. Front and Dock sts. lard, Flour, &c. 2QQBblsI,LOIj:R Boxes MEAT4 200 CaDS Buckets RP. Tubs BUTTER, TTrr sa.lA hv ap 11 tf . ADRIAN & VOLLERS Sugar, Coffee, Rice, &c. 2QQ Bbls SUGAR, I JgQ Sacks COFFEE, IgQ Bbls RICK, 75 Boxes CHEESE, OKA Boxes CRACKERS, For sale bv ' ADRIAN & VOLLKR8. apjltf Soap, Candles, &c. ggQ Boxes SOAP, ;v Q Bores CANDLES, 25Q Gross MATCHES. ' - 1 Kf Boxes STARCH, I For sale by ADRIAN & VOLLERS. aplltf Swift's Specific ! Is nature's own remedy, made from roots gath ered from the forests f Georgia. The method by which it was made was obtained by a half breed from the Creek Indians who inhabited a certain portion of Georgia, which was communi cated to one of the early settlers, and thus the formula has been handed down to the present dayL The above cut represents the method of manufacture twenty years ago, by Mr. 0. T. Swijft, one of the present proprietors. The de mand has been gradually increasing until a $100, 000 laboratory ,1s now necessary to supply the trade. A foreign demand has been created, and enlarged facilities will be required to meet it. This great - Vegetable Blood ' Purifier ! .. CURES Y Cancer, Catarrh, Scrofula, Ecpma, Ulcers, HheRmatism, Blood Taint, hereditary or otherwise, without the use of Mer cury or Potash. Books on "Contagious Blood Poison" and on "Blood and Skin Diseases" mailed free. Fpr tale by all druggists. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, 6a. - nrm chin jyisiy Wagonette for Sound. "TAGONETTE WILL COMMENCE RUNNING REGULAR TRIPS to WRIGnTSVILLE SOUND on and after " Sunday, June 20th. L saving city every Sunday morning at 9 o'cllc, and every evening at 6 o'clock. Returning, wll leave Sound at 7 o'clock A. U. jd 18 tf ' ,T. 3. SOUTHBRLAND. THE CELEBRATED AEEIHGTOH GAME FOILS FOR SALE GAME FOWLS HAVE A NATIONAL M pntatlon. They have tought and won a series ol the greatest mains ever fought on this or ( aw other continent, and Fifteen Pairs, on exhibition at Philadelphia In 76, were honored by the urn ted States Centennial Commissioner with tne w ploma and MedaL - j I have a-variety of Colors and most approveo Breeds to the United States. I will ship splen COCKS, of fine size and handsome pluma. P6' Express. C. O. D., at frorn $4.00 to . $6.00 ewt HENsT$2.60 and $3.00 each; or $7M per Fa $10.00 per Trio. I expect to raise Two Hundrea PiJrs this -Summer, the Finest Games in the World, and will ship Young Fowls oi .March ana April hatch during the months of August, Sep tember and October, at Five Dollars per Pair, or Seven Dollars per Trio, Ird. Whoever disputes the superiority of my Kraa Will please baok the assertion with their stamps : Write for what yon want. .-,,, i . . , Addrees, J. G. ABRUTOTO - j tf Hmiardston. Nash Co. N. Atkinson Manning, AGENTS, Nortii Carolina Home Insurance Comp'y. - ' vr CTTR ' yjTE OFFER TO THOSE WANT1NU xxxc ANCE AGAINST FIRE, Policies in this Old and Reliable Home Institution. . i ........ - All losses promptly paid. W. S. PRIMROSE, President. CHARLE3,ROOT, Secretory PULASKI COWPEB, SnpervBor. iy4tf CMce Hay, Hoop-Iron & Glue Ior ONSIGNMENTS OF COTTON AND NAVAly a STORES CAREFULLY HANDLBD. v . '""WOODY & CURRIB.. ' s Commission Merchants, - j si ia ii -11 j i i isri 11 ii a Sale. mh 88 tf ?Z '- - Wllnu-gton. n. ; n I 7 :J . !- V-
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 21, 1886, edition 1
2
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