Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Nov. 11, 1886, edition 1 / Page 2
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"'-S -i lis : IS I i 4 - - . w -7K .-. - V T'iY- -1 iJiSIiiher Announcement. ;-w,la5;'itfOKKm6 CTA&taaMdeet dafis news- pptr in North Carolina,U published dally.exoept monaay, at 57 go per year. (4 00 for six months, , - S3 00 for three monthB, $1-50 (or two months; 75o v for one month, to mail subscribers. Delivered to ' - . city subscribers at the rate of IS cents per week 1 or any period from one week to one year. THE WEEKLY ST All Is published every Friday morning at f 1 SO per year, SI 00 for six months. W eents for three months , ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One square one day, SI 00; two days, f 1 75 ; three days, 2 50 four days, S3 00: fire days, S3 SO; one week, $400; S to 00 ; two months, $1? 00 ; three months, $24 00 ; six months, $40 00 ; twelve months, $60 00. Tea lines of solid Nonpareil type make one square. All announcements of Fairs. Festivals, Balls Hops, Ho-Nloa, Soetety Meetings, poutacai Meet lngs, o,wlll be charged regular advertising rates , will be charged regular advertising rates Notices under head of "City Items" SO cents per line for first Insertion, and IS cents per line ior each subsequent Insertion. NoadvertSaementatusertedtaLooalftolninnat I any price. . I Advertisements Inserted once a week in Dally I wmbechargredSlOOpersquareforeaohbrtio Kvery other day, three fourths of dally ; rourtns 01 aaiiy nwi 1 Twice a wees, two thirds of aaiiv rate. or trtpUHJOlumn advertisements. I taut of real able rejected Notices of Xarrlage or Death. Tribute of Re spect, Resolutions of Thanics, &c, are oharged for as ordinary advertisements, but only half rattrt wiien paid for strictly tn advance. At this rate 50 cents will pay for a simple announcement .of Hiiiriaze or Death. - Advertisements to fallow reading matter, or to : occupy any special piaos. will be charged extra according to the position desired " Advertisements on which uo specified nnabtl of Insertions is marked will be continued "till for bid," at the option of the publisher, and eharged up to the date of discontinuance. Amusement. Auction and OSiclal advertisement I one dollar per square fox each insertion. Advertisements kept under the Bead of "Kew Advertisements' will be charged fifty per cent, extra. . Advertisements discontinued before the time ; contracted for has expired, charged, transient rates for time actually published. Payments for transient advertisements must be made in advance. Known parties, or strangers with proper reference, may pay monthly or quar tsrly, according to contract All announcements and recommendations of candidates for office," whether in the shape of communications or otherwise, will be charged as advertisements. - Contract advertisers will not be allowed to ex oeed their space or advertise any thing foreign to their regular business without extra charge at transient rates. pffffi.'loStal Sk'thewbffir. ttancee b0 &t Advertisers should always specify the Issue or issues they desire to advertise In. Where no is sue Is named the advertisement wDl be inserted la the Dally. Where an advertiser ooutraots tot the paper to be sent to him luring the time his advertisement 1b in, the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his ad - dresa : u iVionimo Mar. By XSEId1iI&3S H. BERNARD WILMINGTON, N. C. Wednesday Eventng Nov. 10, 1886 E VENINti EDITION, THE NECESSITY Of EXECUTING ' " " ' LAW. Through the years the Stab has favored a change with reference to pardons of criminals by the State - Executive. In many articles the mat ter has been discussed. It is surely not democratic, not republican to in vest one man with absolute power over: life and death. Nothing but . the existence of such power could possibly reconcile freemen to its ex ercise. . Custom, habit' play havee with our convictions sometimes. What happens day by day does not disturb or alarm us. Familiarity breeds sometimes contempt, but it . -oftener reconciles men to what is oc curring." Upon the principle - that . vice which at first shocks is after- . wards embraced, so people can be come so reconciled to any condition of things that they cease to wonder, complain or even reflect. If there had -never been the one man power in North Carolina and it . was for, the first time gravely pro posed that henceforth the work of the courts in matters of life. and death should be subject to the revi sion of one fallible mortal, with like : prejudices and infirmities as. his fel low men", and upon his will should. . depend the ' punishment of criminals' or their pardon; thus negativing, de stroying the ". findings cif courts; if Jfchisr proposition were to be seriously would 'create such.arevul- r-fc'C- steeling on tne-instant, would news, or disouss briefly and properly subjeots I. .... interest, are not wanted : and, if accept- I laitoIUl ana to. everv ot&er was. tnev wiii mvanaDij w . . : If the real name of the author ts withheld. I communities .. ' ftm iter nV. r"r-- a n n A n m mami mm. m -. .a w -a&4 duuu team auu au taLluuiSLUo - 'on-" the fpart of-freflectirig"and law : " "abiding citizens that the'". proposer would be 'scouted and "derided as . -, . an unseemly, foolish and yieionary innovator.' And . yet, because we have this power n if nil exercise and : v - have been accustomed to it,everybody is tuiet and satisfied, and when a murderer is tried and sentenced to be - hanged after a. fair and due - process of law, and his aentence is commuted . or he is pardon edah'aj the gallows is robbed of itSyyictim,all men ac- cept this exercise of one-man power as very righand very proper. We sincefeljrbeHeye that the cause of so much fjm Vis as much owing to the'exerciWoLthe pardoning pow- er as toany Vthrthing. The law's 4ela'y of course t is kme cause and a -' . ' v " " .... , " " f n . ' gteatjppf i the tephnicalities . of. law nd tbVlnmqus. -dodges of advo- tjatesv; fxrusutnte ! otner ; causes ; . tbe -i -! e uryt system is still another cause; the "puling, sickly, disgusting BvauuitiDvmny inai. pervaaes com- mumties and the outrageous sympa thy offered 'to criminals their banda reekuig with the blood of dead men, these all combined constitute pow er ful reasons why crime should flour ish and mob law should prevail. ! t ' But greater as an encouragement : to crime nd v as incentive to lynch- Mf-ma : - a ings is : the "consUnt exercise of the I uue iuiu Fmww. ernors can set aside the findings of courts and torn judicial proceedings one-man power. tide the findings of Ainnm I nnmti; nM'Miiit ho lonff will murderers ana nouse torem .v. J.i..A, nxTnmnnitioa I will take the punishment of villains into their ownliands. " f i There is no cure as long as the causes indicated exist.. Crime should be sternl? met at every turn. The ..... ft unMGtvt the eafetv of homes; the protection of human life all de- f " " : . , ' ffnlnn- pend on the prompt,, faithful, un-1 pend on the prompt,, faithful, un- . Af lm Tmnrnvn I ocuuxng "r" J 7 i -ooinm. lot ho JndcrnR no I J "J - -r--o . ; ' .1 active and capaoie: iei 1 - - . .1 ' i & I ' . f At.l- 1 vwHV - n tinna askinc for executive Clem- : "m- " , r enoy, and; let the Governors cease to hear snob petitions only in the most rare, extraordinary cases that can seldom occur, and then there. will be less crime, fewer murders will be committed, life will be safer, the nnn.t: ntkn MUSUlJ .V - " "w v ly invaded, society will : be more at ease, and law and order, will prevail to a greater extent than now. - Why continue the obnoxious, offen sive, dangerous and abused, one-man power ? Gov. Jarvis said this power gave him actually more trouble than all of the other duties of the Chief Executive. It is announced in the public prints that Gov. Scales has about a yfr and a half, to consider two hundred appli- cations for pardons, i What an abuse on the part of the people, j Here are two hundred efforts made by differ ent communities in behalf of differ ent criminals to get the verdicts of the courts set aside. J It is most censurable this itching, this willingness to sign petitions ask ing for favor for crimej A few friends or relatives of criminals get up a petition and it is handed around and hundreds sign it not knowing or caring as to the actual merits of the petition. . We have known men to sign all sorts of petitions presented them. They refused none; they would sign for two opposing appli cants. As long as this j abuse of privilege exists and the Governor is to be beseeched to favor j criminals under sentence his time' must be chiefly preoccupied by the considera tion of petitions and crime will be increased because patronized or con doned. V j Let people stop this naughty busi ness of atkmg the Governor to set aside the decision of courts. What are the courts for but to try crime? If Judges are capable and fair and the law is properly administered, why endeavor to prevent the due execu- tion of verdicts ? If Governors are to, finally decide in cases of arson, rape, murder, fcc., then j do away with the courts and save all that ex- pense. Let the courts decide. They have the facts, the law, the evidence - -- -- - f all before them,: and they ought to be able to render justice wisely, hu- manely, rightly. - But feeling of sympathy for crimr . , . , . mals will always be potent in pre- venting justice so long as Governors bend the ear willingly to petitions for pardons. - The dead sleep ? in their graves, sent there by the red- handed murderers who were as cruel and remorseless as fatej and this gushing sympathy for the villains who perpetrated the bloody deeds is a reproach to . civilization and , an outrage upon humanity; j How long shall these things prevail ? " How many more bloody villains shall es-; cape punishment through a false, sympathy: and a false .act? A life for a life was the Divine decree. The man who deliberately takes the life of another deserves to forfeit and should forfeit his own. TUB FIGHT OSLV BBGUWaj I The Democratic . papers generally in all sections,, with the exception of a few Protective organs in the Sontb, having got over- the scare and now . .u vUO wcB o I they are and not as they feared, are insisting with renewed earnestness that the fight for Tariff reform has just begun and must be pushed with intense ardor and courage and hope fulness. We are glad to pee this be cause the great question" "really be fore the country is this Tariff ques tion how the taxes shall j be raised. Every citizen T is interested in it. Every man who spends $500 a year- autually pays fully tlbo' tat under the infamous War Tariff. He will continue to pay it for all time and for the benefit of a comparatively few rich manufacturers. : i ,: In all the world there is ndthicg so absolutely devoid of fairness and justice and wisdom as the abomina ble Republican system of oppressing ue many for the benefit of the few. No man who sincerely believes in the ate for a moment any candidate wbo favors it. SThe War (Tariff; is ;the ate tor a moment any canaiuaw wuu . favnra it. "rhfi War Tariff is :th0 4 f ereateat curse me xwipuoucau u ; . cuuu .-r..- neoole. and it should be so razeea rxnn ft JATlr HDITeriDff I and reconstructed andr readjusted as "to Wtlrid of the "most offensive and r by burdensome featuresi iicC;, .vt-'l , The Boston Jw, in .its review of the recent elections, concludes as fol lows: ; "Thelessou of the elections is thtft the People are ready for tariff reform, and that J ITu i nonrv to make it an issue and' only 05 t0 make it an Issue and it nil 1 ha onotBlnprl . Th mums has not I U II wU " i iTa o Krw.n ft r rm Vl v rl v a n p wl I . . r : iV. I waereTenoe peopie nave wsdmvu. sienificance in the fact that, of the tmny- siaerauon 01 ioe morr.Boa larm uiu, v"'J I i . : w v.: 1 1 nn l rr wtwmwo wmsvw oc'"I Liiin. Mini tin i v uiuiccu uuucu luiuuau mw eieeuon. BE SOMETHING- ' The Philadelphia Times rivals its Republican neighbor, the Press, in its jibes and crowing over , what it thought was a - Protection victory. We confess that we are unable to understand the Times. Some months ago it was ridiculing the Democrats who were seriously bent on impro ving and reducing the onerous and unequal .Tariff. But only a few weeks ago we copied from it one or more articles that favored Tariff re duction and that insisted that the surplus in the Treasury must be re duced. This was before the election. But since the election the Time is fairly jubilant oyer the supposed misfortunes of the Democrats, and predicts tnat you will not near again 9i larin reiorm in a iuii quarter ui i oiest greenroom so tar as the exi a century. But the Times is surely gences of display and the size of the a little too previous. litiln tn navina Tf. tmnlrA l tiVVtw v w ty v avav sy w without knowledge. It had an oc casion to show its true colors and out they floated. But before a year passes editorials will appear m this very straddling, wavering Times that will talk of Tariff reduction as glibly as its able and consistent neighbor, the Record. A newspaper, u proresseaiy lnaepenaent, ougut least to have principles and to con- J : . ii . s - i - - l m. 1 sistently maintain them. , We are loth to give up hope of having a savings bank for Wilming ton. A business man of this town writes us: "More banking capital is needed here, and especially a : well conducted Savings Bank, where the poor could. deposit and 'lay up for a rainy day" . Of course one is needed a bank where every Saturday night the workers can go and deposit any sum whatever from ten cents up. Ashe- ville has one and it is the only one m the State. The building and loan 13 - associations cannot, fully take the place of savings banks, and we hope our men of capital will, see to it that proper steps are taken to give the toilers of Wilmington an opportuni- ty to accumulate by weekly deposits a sum against the dav of necessity. CURRENT COMMENT. t xiivea ; ."while Messrs. Blaine and Shrtoaiai were weeping crocodile tears over the "suppression of . tbe Republican vote" at the South, the members of that party were .making a ilveiy ana unassisted fight in Ten- nessee, North Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia, the result of which is seen in considerable gains for their party in Congress. From not a sin gle district has there come any com plaint of intimidation or violence, and the cry of ''fraud" is confined to two or three localities where divisions in tbe negro" vote defeated the parly that has so long made political Berfa of the colored voters. Mr. Blaine's "Poor Negro side show cannot sur-; vive the chimes of the chestnut bells in the next campaign. N. Y. World? uem. , v We print' this morning an important interview with Represen tative Frank Hard as to the lessons of the election and the future of rev--enue reform.' He calls attention to the fact that the proportion of tariff; reformers -will ; be -.increased in the next Congress, -and 4hinks the battle must be foHght out : before the Presi- dential election. It is a wholesome and intelligent:: expression -r- from a soldier who has borne,' the brunt of the battle. Wash. Post, Dem. Mugwump . Journal of America on the result of the Congressional v elec tions is here appended for the infor mation of the curious in such mat ters: "The present Congress was' in no sense a Cleveland Congress." We should like to have jthe. JZvening Post's definition of a Cleveland Con gress. : What would it be ? What would it do? In the opinion of our esteemed oentemporary how: would a Cleveland Congress differ from a Democratio Congress? Is the fiftieth Congress likely to fill the bill as a Cleveland Congress more likely than the forty-nintlrdoes? JV.'Tl Sun. . Tarltr Reform la the West. ' .'' Chicago Herald, Dem. .' Instead of 'being afraid of this question, in its adoption and enthusi- I astio advocacy by the Democratio party lies the one chance of that or ganization to secure the much sought tor labor vote. This vote is now practically . aimless. The element which ,asts it knows that it ; has grievances but it is not sure - as to to trie satisfaction of every imein- genrmJW whois not' beneficiary of the tariff thatthe trouble with this mjw who .g no)- bengfiojary 0f l e ho tariff l,W.'l, nK1i. with thik i wutn,ry nj-uay oTer-M m cratio t WOQld a hopeless c , . .f.,-,.. ii. .;;. vo.iiun.. maiMtow lii - " I fi-ht in 1888 it mnst have a pnnci- nle TheXabor art v will have one -wi ? His jetjes are -on, the FMOlt 1T.RO W ONL Y. , -',' ':. .wV.rNejr .York Bun A Yioa rttiBtftntlv 1 Ai4V - A .v-. hta in. 1 uiuujrom iiib F' 5" J A 1, 1 auguration: so also there is a differv 1 angulation; so ; aleo. there is a differ- ano.d in thn wiv'in which he and the I t"" ""'-.1 W"- "n" F 4 iemuurauv luierureo- iuo icoutw. lrhe. .(..(Un nmnnratR look pu 11, virtum uiC, indignation at me exeonuve ponuuab -,. .. j .a j which has brousrht it down ' -upon 1 brought it do wp' -upon them. On the other, hand the Mugwumps are pleased, a natural accompaniment of Democratio dissatisfaction, lbeir hopes ; and eyes being centred - on Cleveland alone, they care nothing for the reduction of Democratic power,' and regard the defeat j of every Democratio candidate for the Fiftieth Congress as an Administra tion victory,- and are. happy.1 They would have been happier, probably, if the Administration had achieved more Buch victories; and they greet the President' with congratulation, and tell him to go on. But Mr. Cleveland is like an actor who, from the solitude of the stage, hearing sounds of applause from the front row of seats, keeps his eyes on that only, and plays for its approval. It is there that the Mugwumps sit, and the President, knowing that they are his most ardent sympathisers, scarcely blinks in any other direction wVtila f.ViAV a Amir a hi a nnioa .Tha j might be carried on in the hum- uuteuo concerceu. cut it Mr. uieveiand would raise his eyes a minute, he would see that behind this reverential but vindictive little band 1 for whom he specially walks and. talks, the great audience look upon bis performances with un mistakable disapproval. v R'JlclnK Tr Democratic never.e.. New ,0rIe" Times-Democrat. s called . The district represented by that arch free trader, Bragg, who wanted to drive every protectionist out of the Democratic nartv. sees a maioritv I of 5,000 swept away and a Republi - ' 1 can elected by 3,000. In the Toledo (Ohio) district, formerly reliably Democratio by a good majority, and which ought to have given an even larger one this year, Mr. Frank Iiurd is so badly defeated that he has abandoned poiitical life forever, and the Democracy has lost a very effi cient and talented member. In Illi nois, Mr. Morrison himself, leader of the free trade element in Congress, is defeated by the very tactics that tbe Courier Journal suggested, and in . its own btate tbe Democratic speaker, Mr. Carlisle, and its own . - . , , , , . "SfS he ?V narrowest majorities. We micrbt fill columns with ' this Btory were it ne cessary. Had1 this policy of "knif ing" all Democrats who did not agree with one's own tariff views and even among the Morrison faction there are sab factions been adopted by every member of the party, tbe Kepubli cens would have secured a large ma jority. Ilr. George a Free Trader, Pare and Absolute. Boston Transcript. Here follows a little epistle from Henry George to a Connecticut friend, which is worthy ,of being placed on record: New YoBK,,Oct. 12, 1886. I am a free trader, pure and., absolute, and regard protection as a fraud on work ingmen. If I were a citizen of Con necticut! would sign yoor circular or do anything I could to show the workers how they are humbugged by a tariff . which, while protecting , favored capitalists and; landowners lea res them free to grind the faces. of their employes. Yours truly. ; Henry Gbobge. OCR SiTATEjCOrfTEfflPORA.RIES. nni u:j 1 -.-j . u. : I but "business is business," and the drift of trade is to go to. the extent of the law; and the homestead exemption, while it has been the hiding place for many a rascal who has cheated his neighbor, has been a god send to many an '..honest man whose nose was held to ihe grindstone by a hard shy- ti08 ha8 a tendency to clip the wings of the credit system, and it is difficult to tell system, whether tbe law redounds more to the ad vantage of the - creditor or debtor class. Dealers upon a cash basis, whether buyers or sellers.' are not bothered by this law. A refusal of credit is the creditor's means of avoiding loss - ia the case of a would-be purchaser of doubtful character who is not worth any tiag over the homestand. It is an open question whether the debtor is not as much- beneutea by his lack of credit as tbe creditor himself.- -Lenoir Topio. What has produced the hard times, which have now begun to brighten un a little, but which,, with a brief interval of two er three years, have been trying the country ever since ine year, ibyot rney have not been confined to the United States. - High tariff France and free trade England, onlv sens- rated by a body of water that you can see across, nave surxerea aiise and at the same SaOT:2SfeaSg maae oy me uemocrauo party, tor since that party. took possession of the adminis tration the tariff baa not been touched or changed in a wordY-flgure or letter. The tariff of to-day is the same Republican tana mai nas oeen ia acure operation for fifteen years. Ana yet the Renublicana tell you that their 'tariff is a sure guarantee I of good prices ior farm products and good wages for labor. Greensboro Patriot. . f I Disguise it as they : mav. the longest - boodle . pole always knocks the political ' persimmon. Altoona Sunday I w? THE CROPS. fm - n ...... n..Xn.. of fn1 tare Cotton Potatoes,. Bncltwbeat, Tobacco, flay. r::r ' -;; - i J -'UTTejegraph to the KoniBc titar.- ' WA8HbrT0ir. Not, lO.The report, of the DeDartmeot of Aericulture says: Uottouureturna for jSQvemoer aueat rapia Drocress of Dicklne., unusual cleanness or fibre, and shortness of . the late crop on light uDlands ana aistricta moBt anectea 07 arougnt. ; iiigm irosu, sumcieui 10 arresi 0rrwt.h fiAVA nf.Mirrftd in the' northern.-dis- trfcand the centre of the coltoabelt. -In Arkansas and Tennessee a lar?e yield is ft - Lt -. r.i M,4-.i.MiAi1A. BQrrf and ln Texaa,tiie yield is higher .1 1 i'w. ...,rii .L. tT r -was luiriy-ocywu uuuuicuiua m a theacre and the October conttition o&, un Atlantic coast the effect of the excessive , . , . . nnT,iififl drnttirht vf tha later BMann ia onnnwnt in 1 thA rfi- rducedi;Droduction.v The foliowina:. per . z. ,- z: ... - centafees or the several jstates. inaicaunR the probable product, , are Dased on a full croi). uaimDaired bv lilaries or losses from any cause, and the general average ls-two or three points lower than the result of the October returns; Virginia 71, JMortu Uaro- lina 7V South Carolina 72. Georgia 76, Florida 82. Alabama 75, Mississippi 77 Louisiana 78, Texas 71, Arkansas 86, Ten-. -nessee 8&;''-xLis .f -s'i 51 The vield of Corn. acooraiDs to revised returns of the yield, is 22 bushels per acre, making a product, upon the present ad justment of acreage, of 1,668,000,000 bash els. - This accords well wun .the recent re turns of - condition, and will not be mate-; rially changed , in the final review of, the work of the year. ... The . yield of the great corn surplus States is variable, the lowest of . course ia, the region of . the drought Ohio S3. 5. Indiana 33... Illinois 24.7. Iowa 24.5,. Missouri 22.2, Kansas 21.3. Nebraska 27.5; New York and. the Jfiastern states exceed 80 bushels, Pennsylvania nearly as much, and the Southern States generally a reduced rate of yield. -. - - - r r.. t ,Tbe potato product is nearly the same as. last year, won. mgner yields ia tneisast and lower in the Wtst The average is 73 bushels per acre, giving a product of 163,- 000,000 bushels. The Buckwheat crop makes a yield-of about thirteen bushels per acre, promising a product exceeding 11,000,000 bushels, f " The apparent production of Tobacco is at a rate slightly exceeding an average of 700 pounds per acre, or about 485.000,000 pounds,' which is equal to the average re quirements or consumption and exporta-, tion. - tt . v , " . ! The average rate of yield for, the Hay crop is close at one and two-tenths tons per acre, - and ' an apparent product of about 45.000,000 tons. r r -j; t i .FOREIGN. , Tbe Balsarlan Gorernment Selects Prince Waldemar of Denmark jto Socceed Prince Alexander Sofia Ofllclal Realm at tbe Demand of Russia, Etc Br Cable to the Horning Star. " Sofia, November 10. Sabranje. at a se- cret session last evening, after a debate u :-v. 1 1 i j : j i . WU1UU lOBlCU IUICC UUUI9, UCC1UCU UI ClCCfc Prince Waldemar. third son of the King of Denmark, as successor to Prince Alexander on the throne of Bulgaria. Prince Walde mar is twenty eight years old. At to-morrow morning's session of Sa branje rrince Kadoslavor : will propose Prince - Waldemar as candidate for the throne and Sabranje will elect him by ac clamation and appoint a committee of five to officially convey the decision to tbe Prince. M. Branoff, Prefect of Sofia, has re signed. His dismissal had been demanded by Gen. Kaulbars, because he had ejected a Russian subject from Sofia. Council Chamber Prefect at once offered to resign. but Gen. Kaulbars insisted that Goverment dismiss him, &, lUICUiiKI IV. bSUIh 1BUU' koff, the Russian who led the recent revolt Tiknova, November 10. Capt Nabo- I authorities for causing an insurrection and convicted. He was sentenced to death. His fellow-conspirators have also been tried and sentenced to fifteen years' imprisoment each. London. November 10. The Bulgarian Government has consented to release Capt. Nabokoff , leader of the revolt at Bourg&s. PERSONAL. - ! Miss Winnie Davis is to visit Washington this winter and will be pre sented at the White House by Secretary uauiar. ran. mc9. Fred Archer is dead. To any one who has ever seen the most famous jockey of all times bring a winner round Tottenham Corner and then make the run in, the news will come like a than- derclsp. if. T. Star. When is a bore not a bore? When he's away. Wash. Post ROE MULLETS! Forty Barrels Bright New Mullets ! JUST rfitOKrVKTJ ' HALdJU fc . if Jtii AKb A-LJL. no 5 DWtf NOBTH CABOLIEA RESUURCES. "Oneof (As most useful uriet qfdeseriptiie books ever published about any StaU.n-Bos- on tvsz. . .... , , . Hale's Industrial Series. ' ' Two Volumes Kow Eead. I. The Woods and Timbers of North Caj-ollns. Curtla'a. Emmons and Karr Botanloal Ke porta; snpplemented by accurate : County Reports of Standing Forests, and Illus trated by an excellent Hap of the State. ; 1 Volume 12mo. Cloth, 273 pp., S1.25. II. Ia tbe Coal and Iron Counties of tTl FLfty-slx Counties, and Map of the State. 1 Volume 12mo Cloth, 425 pp.. $.5 Q. Sold by all Booksellers, or mailed postpaid on receipts of the price, by S. J. HALS & SON, BOOKBSLLBBS ASH Pvsijssxas, STATioaxas, .- . . MAW - XOBK; - OB P. M. HAUt Pttbllsher.Ralelett. H. C. ICharlotte Daily Chronicle A DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER. . ' Bright, Nowiy, Cheap. ' Contains Latest Telegraph Dispatches and Mar ket Report. ' .., , Believes In Keeping np with the Times. " ' tikes AncresslTeness tn Bosmess and In State. . Xnooorages thoTJpballdtng of North Carolina Is a 8trong Advooate of Store aad Better Ed ucation. : I7.CQ per "year ; 12.00 for three months. - W. 8. HEJCBT, i t ""? . Bdltor and Proprietor . Chanotte,l!T.;c. , oo SSIMtWtf THE LATEST .NEWS mcoMMBRGimm W .tI,M IN aT a N -6ifA R KET 1. ; STAR OFFICE. Nov. 104 P. M. SPIRITS TURPENTINE-Quoted steady at the opening at 83 cents per gallon. with sales of 75 casks at quotations. 1 ROSIN The. nket waaixuoted firm at 77f cents per bbl for Strained and 82 cents "for Good Strained. t TAR Market firm at $1 60 per bbL. of 280 lbs., with sales of receipts at quota tions. " ..,-- CRUDE TURPENTINE Market firm at $1 90 for Virgin and -Yellow Dip, and fl 00 for Haro- f " v ; ! - COTTON Market opened 'J firm on a basis of cents for Middling. - Sales of 50 bales reported at this figure." The foP lowing are 'the official quotations: s f'; ; Ordinary .-. . . . I . . J I. 5f Good Ordinary. . .. . i 7f: Low Middling. . . .. . . . 8 r Middling 8 Good Middling. .... .. . 8i . cents TfiTb RICE. Market', steady.'. We quote: Rough: 5 Uplands, 5565s - per bushel; tide-water 90c$l 10. Cucan: Fair 3 3f cents; Good 8J4 cents; Prime 4 cents. . , TIMBER Market steayf wim Sales as follows: Prime and Extra Shipping,' 5 first- class heart, $9 OO10 00 per M. feet; Ex tra'-Mill, good -heart, 8 608 00; Mill Prime, $6 005 50; Good Common MilV $4 005 00; Inferior to Ordinary, 3 00 4 00. : . . PEANUTS Market firm. ' Prime 4045 cents ; Extra Prime 5055 cents; Fancy 60 cents per bushel of 28 IBs. - :, RECEIPTS. Cotton.... .....i.. 817 bales 143 casks 664 bbls 47 bbls 24 bbls Spirits Turpentine. , i Kosin. ...... Tar........ ..i...... Cmde Turpentine.. . , ' DORIES TIC MARKETS. ; ' tBv Telegraph to the Mornlnje Star.l Naw ? York. ? Nov. -10. Noon. Money quiet at 56 per cent. . Sterling exchange 480f481 and. 484i484t.i State bonds dull and steady; ' uovcrnment securities dull and heavy.- : V - - . . . Commercial. - ; :. Cotton steady ; sales of 338 bales; middling uplands 9c: middling Orleans 9 5-1 6c; futures steady, with sales at the following quotations: November . ; 8. 84c ; December a90c'January 8.99c; February 9.08c; March 9.17c;,April 9.27c. Flour quiet and 6teady,. vvheat lower. Corn dull and lower. Pork firm aL$9 7510 00. Lard steady at $6 20. Spirits turpentine dull at 860. ' Rosin dnll at 95cl .05. Freights steady. BALTDfbss, Nov. 10. Flour steady with moderate . .inquiry; Howard' street and Western super $2 252 65; extra $2 75 3 50; family 3 754 50;. city mills super $2 252 75; extra 3003 75; Rio brands $4 374 62. Wheat southern steady and quiet; western firmer and dull; southern red 8588c; amber 8689c; No. 1 Maryland 8686ic; No. 2 western winter, red on spot 82i82ic;7 Corn southern : about steady and quiet; western firmer and dull; southern white 4546c; do yellow 4546Jc ?iHKIfiSfflABKET8. (By Cable to the Mornlne Star.l ; Livaapooi,, Nov. ,10. Noon. Cotton business good at . unchanged prices. Middling uplands 5d ; middling Orleans 5 5-16d; sales of 12,000 bales; for specula tion and export 2,000 bales; receipts 6,200 bajes, all American. Futures steady tfp lands. 1 m c, November delivery 4 63-64 4 62-64d; November and December delivery 4 58 644 59-64d ; December and January delivery 4 58-64d; January and February delivery -4 5864d;- February and March delivery 4 59-64d; March and April delivery 4 61-64d; April and May delivery 4 63-64 5d ; June and July delivery 5 4-64d. 8ales of cotton to-day include 10,200 baies American.- -. Lohdoh, Nov. 10, Noon. Consols for money 101 1-16; account 101 516. sarannsii Bin fflarKet - Sayannali News, Nov. 9. - The market was 'quiet, but1 steady and unchanged. The sales for the day were 178 barrels at about quotations, as follows: Fair 3r3c; good 84c; prime 4J4ic; choice 415ic ' Rough, rice Country lots 5565c; tide water uc5l 10. f: rf ew TorK Peanut IKarKet. ' N. T. Journal of Commerce, Nov. 9.; The market ia without, much demand. Prices are easy. v' Quoted at 4fc for fancy hand-picked; 3ic for farmers' grades. The New Yotk Medical Journal says: 'The indorsements ol numerous medical men of prominence also indicate that Liebig Ca.'s Coca .Beef Tonic has merits." - Cures dyspepsia, biliiousnesB,malaria,debility. f STIIX IN THE LEAD, r The Greensboro Patriot Cheapest Paper in the State, considering the 'Amonntof Beading Matter. -'f-', BTJBSCKIPTIoir $1.66 A YEAB; $1 FOB ft MOS. advertlaera for placing their business before the reading people of GullfordDaridsoD, Bowan, Caswell Feison, 'Atemanoo and Randolph, the ai luuauuu OCXs VI iUTUi uunnnj i r THE PATRIOX I "; Has the LARGEST CIRCULATION of any Pa- It fflnu van .11 iha Tkn 1 T. nirttra lt gives you .the NEWS from the Neighboring WUUUUOt - v It gives you all the Important STATS NEWS. ' It gives you the GENERAL NEW. . It gives yon all the LATEST NEWS from Wash gives the Farmers Valuable 'Agrlcnltural -iv wo shiu auuvu uiuuivowlUK iut7 UiffJ X U 111 U19 Dairy, and the Orchard, as well as the Family ; tVBead the PATRIOT all the year roond. , XJ. Z. W. WHITEHEAD, JanlStf : i Editor and Proprietor. The Home Journal, : . FDBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY 1F.OKNING ' . "f At Warrentont W. C ' JOHN W; HICKS, ' EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. It has a splendid etoonlatlon In the oountfes of warren, Vance, KaUlax, N. a, and Meokienbiuir, va. As an adrertlslng medium It la unsurpassed. Terms 11.60 a rear In adTanch. ' Address THE HOME JOURNAL, - ; The Ilarion Star rPHS OLDEST NXWSPAPEK PITETJRTni;. TN X the Pee Dee seotlon, one of the wealutest ana mosx prosperoas m ue state, oners to Com mission and Wholesale Merchants and If annfmo. tnrers. and to those who have sdoDted the nisn of sollm by sample, an excellent medium of com munication with a large and influential class of merchants, mechanics, planters and naral store men. wnoee patronagv is worm BOUCitatlQn.v Ad Tertlsements and Business Cards Inserted on Jibe , Addles t-1 v TK3 STAB, . dsofitf t , ""."" Hartona a BROWN'S 1 -V 7,-&6;. WILL CURE HEADACHE -INDIGESTION -BILIOUSNESS DYSPEPSIA NERVOUS PROSTRATION J MALARIA CHILLS, and FEVERS -TIRED FEELING - GENERAL DEBILITY PAIN in the BACK and SIDES IMPURE BLOOD CONSTIPATION FEMALE INFIRMITIES RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA , KIDNEY AND LIVER - , .TROUBLES y FOR, SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS , 1 The 'Geanine has Trade-Mark and crossed Red Lines oa wrapper. : TAKE NO OTHER. .. Cancer of the Tongue. Mf wire, some three or lour years ago, v, trou bled with an "nicer on the aide ol her tongue near the throat.: The pain vras incessant, causing loa of sleep and producing treat nervous prostration Awmpanyiig this trouble was rheumatism. It baased tDom the sfcoul.Sers and centered in the wrtet of one hand, she almostlosinjc the use of ii Between toenffering ol the two, life had grown denaome ' By the nse of a ha!f dozen emall SsfflorStnlA Spertflo relieved and restored to tiea.th. 1 his was inree 5ears aeo. and there has beea no return ol the da yea.ru av, nuu h. L. Middlebrooks. Sparta, Ga4 J une 5, 1S8S. ThSw??Ktfio Co . Drawer , Atlanta, Ga. )tt W. 23d St., N. Y. Jy 16 ly i nrm chm $60,000 Cash "yTLL .BB PAID IN WILMINGTON DUETS 6 the month of November by Life iDsariiice Com panies. Thet largest, oldest, cheapest and best Life Insurance Co.' in the United States is the MUTUAL LEFVS INS. CO. of N. T. Write to the undersigned giving your age, a id a statement showing the exact cost of any amount of insur ance will be sent yon. i 1 M S. WILLAED, Agent, noStf T 214 NORTH WATER STKBET., 3ST. JEt. O. EW RIVER OYSTERS I Fresh Supplies Received Regularly Best Wines, Beer, Liquors and Cigars. ; " - i STAR SALOON. ' i seXltf C.GEO. F. HERBERT, Froii'r. k i WILMINGTON, N C A ISrEW: H O T E L, ELEGANTLY FURNISHED, UNSURPASSED CUISINE, 'AND COMPLETE COMFORT OF GUESTS ASSURED. ' 1an 84 tf j v " - W. A. BRYAN. .Wm.iEr Sprager & Co. AYS A FINE LINK OX FIRST CLASS ESG- lish Breech-Xoadlng Gnas. Revolvers and Am munition cf Bvery description. They can mate as low p lc 8 as any ouse, having made ar rangements .with a house that give them Asso ciation Extras on Ammunition . i 19, 21 23 Marfcet street, no 7 tf WUmbisrton, S.' . ELECTRIC BELT FBI! To introdnoQ it, we will for a short time give away ia each county, to those likely to make good agents, a limited nam", icof onrGerman Electro Gairanlc Suspensory Belts, a positive and nTifailing enre for Nerve- Debility, Weakness, Varicocele, Loss ot Vigor, Rheumatism, eta... a30 Reward paid if every Belt we manufacture doen sot generate a genuine , electrio current. Address at once, GERMAN BELT AGENCY,P.O.Boxl7Brooklrn.New7prk m 18D&W1T ' . Atkinson: &"Hanning's insurance Rooms, " . NO.' 113 NORTH WATER STREET, TVIlmlnston, N. C. Fire, Marine, and Life cflt AMcrejrate Capital Represented Over $100,CCO,0 0. ; lelltf j ' v . , r, r ADVERTISE ES merchant and Farmer PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT MAJRIONyBO XJTH CAB OLWA It has a large and Increasing circulation n the heart of the Pee Dee country, the beat Cottos seotlon of the two States. , .. -It is a desirable medium of communication with both the Merchants and Farmers of tc J seotlon, and particularly with those of Marion aad Marlboro Counties. It Is therefore the paper for the Business Men of Wilmington. ' , , ; . r v .. - J. D. MoLUCAS, V - . . "' proprietor. ana WbiaUey ITab- : . u miHi .t hump Wltn- ont pain. Book of par ticulars sent r n. ' ,65 Whitehall Street. ter" eent eated free.EHrEMED.OQ- BtTFF AIAvNjjt , , Je U DA Wly tn th sat - i The Hanning Time ' ' PUBLISHED BY H.: L DlEEt Jr., at MANNING S.C. ,. Only $1.60 per annumtln advance. Cheap Ad wrtteln media V JKUN Sic BlfJSIlL j 1 - V "
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 11, 1886, edition 1
2
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