Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Jan. 14, 1888, edition 1 / Page 2
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?wubJliir' Announcouierit. iiiS HORNING STAR, oldwt dftlij Jiews u; er in North Carollna,la Pushed o?i lo-iaay, at J6 00 per year, $3 00 lor six months, SI 60 for threa months; 60 ots for on month, to Lail subriblw. Delivered :to city robbers at the rate of 12 oenta per week for any period rrrs ono week to one year. THE WEEKLY STAB la published every IWda? morning at f 1 00 per year, 60 ets. for six months. io cts for three months. ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). Opej on i day, 1 Oe ; two days, $1 75 ; three days, 50. lour days, 3 00 ; five days, $3 60 ; one week. SM two weeks, $6 60 : three weeks $3 60 ; one mono, f 10 00 ; two months, J17 00 ; three months, 24W, six months, 40 00; twelve months, $60 00. Ten ilnoa of solid Nonpareil type make one equate. All announcements of Fairs, Festivals, Balls Eovs, Plc-Nloa, Society Meetta PoUtloal Meet ! ngs, &o.,will be charged regular advertising rates Notices under head of "City Items" B??! i!no for first Insertion, and 15 oenta per line lot each subsequent insertion. So advertisements Inserted In Local Column at sy price. A I vertisetaenta Inserted onoe a week In Daily will be charged $100 per square for each lnseraon. B-e-7 other day, three fourths of daily rate, T p i so a week, two thirds of daily rate. Communications, unless they oonu Impor tant news, or discuss briefly and properly subjeott of roal interest, are not wanted: and, if acoepV able iu every other way, they wiU invariably b rejected If the roal name of the author is withheld, ia extra charge will be made for double-eoluasa r triple-column advertisements. Notices of Marriage or Death, Tribute of Be hcet, Resolutions of Thanks, sc, are charged ror as ordinary advertisements, but only half rates when paid for strictly In advance. At this rate v) cants will pay for a simple announcement ox rj.?.rr'at:e or Death. Advertisements on which no specmed numbef oi Insertions Is marked will be continued "tin ror Md," at the option of the publisher, and charged nu to the date of discontinuance. AxauEsment, Aection and Offlolal advertisements -no dollar per square for each Insertion. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to oooupy any special place, will be oharged estra according to the position desired Advertisements kept under the head of "New -.dvorttsements" will be charged fifty per cent, sstrs. Advertisements discontinued before the tlma contracted for has expired, oharged transient -ates for time actually published. Pnnenta for transient advertisements must be made In advance. Known parties, or strangers vtrh proper reference, may pay monthly or auar according to contract. AU announcements and recommendations of -aniidatea for offloe, whethef In the shape of onnunloationa or otherwise, will be charged as -. dvsrtteementa. Contract advertisers will not be allowed to ex-i-jod their space or advertise any thing foreign ta tn3ir regular business without extra charge at transient rates. uesiiitancss must be made by Check, Draft, "ostallSonev Order, Express, or In Registered l etter. Only Buoh remittances will be at the rfsk of the publisher. Advertisers should always specify the issue of issues they desire to advertise In. Where no Is sue Is named the advertisement will be inserted Is the Daily. Where an advertiser contracts fof ' he 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 ads dress. Foe Morning Star 53j WJSXjIAIH 15. BERN A ED. WILMINGTON IT. C. EVENING EDITION. Friday, Jan, 13, 6 P. M. A BILL TO DESTROY, Those who favor the Blair bill and think it is the very thing may be counting chickens before they are ! hatched. The bill starts out by giv ing the largest sums the .first three ; years, and then reducing until it falls to the lowest point in the eighth year. The third year will give more than three times as much as the eighth year will give. Now the bill requires the States to raise each year as much as the Federal Government will give. Let us see how it will work. The third year North Caro lina would receive near or quite $1,100,000, provided the people of this State taxed themselves so great a sum. But they would notdo this, and no Legislature would dare to levy any such tax for negro schools, which would be nearly double what it now is. Now let us look at the eighth year. By the gradual reduction that is pro vided for after the third year, when the last year of Federal inter meddling is reached what will we find ? The Federal bounty will be some $350,000. The State of North Carolina must meet that sum. It will do .this, but how disastrous after all! North Carolina now raises $600,000 annually for her common schools. In eight years it would raise not more than $350,000, for the people by that time would be so accustomed to Federal aid they would no longer ba self-reliant and self-helpful. Theywould clamor for more Government pap. Having be come accustomed for eight years to the aid of crutches, they would not stand alone when they were taken away. We believe that the end would be ruinous to the schools. Having re duced their own sums given to schools each year to make them con form to the Federal sum proffered, the result would be that at the ter mination of eight years of bounty, they would not raise much more than half the sum now raised. In the ninth year the year after Gov ernment bounty was removed the sum would be hardly a half what it is to-day. Leave the Southern States to work out their own destiny alone and solve in their own way the great educa tional question and in eight years North Carolina would raise annually one million dollars. Pat her on crutches; compel her to lean upon Governmental bounty, until her ed ucational fund has sunk to $350,000, which will be the case we have no doubt, and we will find our common schools about in the condition they were in wheh 'the Radicals stole the school funds and the Democrats at last got control in 1872. Thfl "New -v.. a. evening jrost, an able independent Republican paper of high grade, says: "An attempt is made to break the force of the argument again the Federal Educa tion scheme which the Evening Post recent ly drew from the disastrous effects of the Western Reserve Fund uon Connecticut's schools, by the claim that the cases are not parallel. It is said that the aid which Con necticut received was an out-and-out sub stitute for local taxation, while the Blair bill promises aid only in proportion to the sum which the State raises itaelf for educa tional purposes, and therefore that it would stimulate, not lethargize. It is true that under the Biair bill no Btate can draw more money out of the Federal Treasury for educational purposes - in any year than it expended for similar purposes out of its own revenues ;the previous year; but hu man nature in the South would prove very unlike human nature elsewhere if the influ ence of this outside subsidy were not to check the present tendency toward heavy local taxation for the schools." The experience in the past was as bad as bad could be. The people of Connecticut, under the bounty given some half century ago, aotually ceased altogether to tax themselves. If you will extend the time of the Blair bill to twenty years until you reduce the annual appropriation to a few thousand dollars, we have no doubt it will end in North Carolina as it acted in Connecticut, it will de stroy the schools, and leave them without a dollar's fund. The peo ple once trained not to give will act unon their teachinsr. and who can a w blame them? There is a strong, but at present in active, minority sentiment among white tax-payers ?iot to be taxed to educate the children of negroes. We believe that there are five hundred such white voters among the readers of the Stab only. We have often talked with such. We see more or less of them every day. The Blair bill will very greatly increase that number if what is urged in this article is correct. The Blair bill involves so many points, if we were to undertake to cover them all we should have to write a dozen columns. We have often discussed them, but one at a time. The unconstitutionality of the bill the Star has often presented. The dangers that lurk in the bill in the way of Federal intermeddling with the local affairs of the States are of great moment and have been often pointed out in this paper. AN USURPATION. The resolution of Senator Chan' dler relative to an investigation of the reported bulldozing of negro elec tors at Jackson, Miss., is in keeping with the antecedents and animus of the Republican party. The leaders know their chances are desperate. They have no other card left in the pack but "Southern outrages." On the eve of every Presidential election the outrage mills are set going by Republican politicians in the North. The grist must be furnished by in dustrious liars and peripatetic pro pagandists and slanderers. Every local disturbance is construed to mean a new rebellion, and must be paraded in Northern newspapers "to fire the Northern heart." Edmunds, Evarte, Chandler, Hale, Sher- maD, Blaine, Foraker and such ieiiows or the oaser sort are expected to more heaven and hearth in order to make capital for their party. All sorts of char es are to be trumped up and all sorts of violations of rights are to be perpe trated, and all for the benefit of un principled leaders aud to , try to infuse life into a party dying of moral putridity and gangrene. There is no Democrat who knows what the name of his party means who will oppose a proper investiga tion of any violations of law or of the constitutional rights of freemen There is no Democrat of character who will justify violence or dis- oraer or a corrupt oanot. mis we hold to be true. But hark! There is no Democrat of the true Southern school who will sustain any measure that violates the reserved rights ot sovereign Commonwealths, that interferes with the State courts, or invades the prerogatives of local government. What right has the Congress to invade the State of Mississippi and to inquire into the occurrences at tending a municipal election! If that can be done, then indeed is the Con gress supreme in all departments. There is no spot under Heaven sa cred from its withering touch no asylum into which its political Paul Prys and its smelling committees may not penetrate. The Congress has no'Constitu tional right to make any such in quiry as Chandler proposed, and his party sustained by a full vote. It is a gross and bold usurpation, but as we said is in full keeping with the principles, traditions, practices and plans of the old rotten, moribund Radical party a party conceived in hatred and living on elandej and mi . usurpation. iae people nave an other example of the reckless disre gard of the Constitution and of home rule by the most treaoheroui, venal, despicable party that ver cursed a 1 free people and stained the historic page. COAL. AS AN ILLUMINATOR. The igus are daily multiplying that the laboring classes are under standing more and more the decep tions and oppressions of the Protec tive Tariff system. The evidence is cumulative that throughout manu facturing New England both the capitalists and employes are falling away in their blind attachment to the jug-handle system a system that has all along been on one side and that the side of the monopolists and employers. We could fill a column with evidence to show that the true light is lightening the East, and that large manufacturers are coming out for a speedy reconstruction and re duction of the great War Tariff. But the reformation is not confined to the New England section. Day is dawning upon benighted Pennaylva- nia, where the darkness is of the Egyptian sort in the time of the Pha roahs, and where men grope in the great gloom and are heard saying ' What are we? Children crying in the night; Children crying for the light; And with no language but a cry." Recently the Workingmen's Asso ciations in Pennsylvania have with entire unanimity adopted resolutions against a portion of the Tariff the tax on coal. Tbev have resolved not to vote for any man for Represent tive who shall vote against tne re peal ot the coal tax. lhat-is cer tainly a step in the right way. The evils of Protection are made visible to them because it ia practically de monstrated that it oppresses. It op presses in Pennsylvania in coal and it oppresses equally as much in other particulars. The light is shining in at last in a very dark corner. It is only partial, not a lull blaze, it is to be hoped that the bright sun, with out a cloud or upeck to obscure, will flood the land with its needed illumi nation so as to reveal fully the ugly, unequal, absurd, wicked Tariff. The Philadelphia Record says: "The miners of Pennsylvania are at last becoming convinced that a system which makes it so easy for the coal monopolies to combine against them cannot serve for their protection. They have begun to recognize that they have themselves been among the chief victims of their own prejudices in favor of a high tariff. While proclaiming the excellence of 'Protection to American industry,' the Coal Combination that has seized upon the anthracite region of Penn sylvania haa from time to time provided itself with the cheapest possible labor from the lowest elements of .European emigration. By its rapacious policy of extorting the last dollar of profit from a necessary of living this Coal Combination has systematically degraded labor until the condition of the miners of Pennsylvania has become more precarious than is that of their brother miners in any other part of the world." THE BLAIR BILL. Wadesboro Messenger. l here is no more important meas ure before Congress than the Blair bill. Upon it both parties are divi ded. Democratic Senators from the same State separate when they reach it, and patty lines are oblitera;e'd in its presence. Expressed in a single sentence, the Blair bill proposes to take $77,000, 000 from the United States Trea sury, and distribute it among the States for educational purposes. The opponents of the bill say. in reply, "The measure you propose is worse than the evil you intend to remedy." This is a constitutiona government, oenencent when con fined to its legitimate objects, de struotive when permitted to disre gard its constitutional limitations. If it be admissable for the genera government to take control of the education of our children,what is to J l . 1 . 4 prevent tne enoroaenment ot per sonal, domestic, and social evils at which every honorable man instinc tively revolts? The ablest advocate of the Blair bill has said, "In my opinion it is the first step this Government has ever taken in the direction of the solution of what is called the race problem: and I believe it will tell more power fully and decisively upon the future destinies of the colored race than any measure or ordinance that has yet been adopted in reference to it . more -decisively than either the thir teenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth amendments, unless it is to be con sidered, as I do consider it, the logi cal sequence and practical continu - ance of those amendments." And this commends it to the people of the South ! Shades of the mighty ! Spirits of Jefferson, Madison and Calhoun, defend us ! Where, in all this broad land is it pretended that the enactments known as the thir teenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth amendments, were in accord with the spirit of the Constitution ? They were made part of that instrument by Federal legislation, and are bind ing on us because they were ratified by the States. The amendments are palpable usurpations. They were rat ified by the South only to escape the horrors of reconstruction, and the hell of carpet-bag government; and now comes the Blai? bill as 'the logi cal sequence and the practical contin uance of these, amendments! The amendments having been ratified and we will maintain onr plighted honor, but we want no addition to our hu miliation, no insult to our injury. Where is this thing to stop ? Is there to be no limit to federal en croachment . npon the rights of the States and the liberties of the people? Better have no States than to have them emasculated the miserable, palsied, pntrid wreok of former great ness. SUPREME COURT DECISION . Raleigh News-Obsarver. Lockman vs. Hobbs. Mahala Sherill devised lauds to Hobbs for the use ot Belva James for life, and after her decease to tbo use of the lawfully begotten heirs of her. body, eaoh 009 to share and share like. Iu the case of the death of Belva and all of her children, all of the property willed to her reverts to "my nephew" Hobbs. Belva had two children living at the death of Ma hala, one of whom married Liockman and died in the life time of Belva, leaving two children, who are plain tiffs. Held, That the devise to the law fully begotten heirs of the body of Belva was to her children, who took vested remainder for life, which would have been in fee, had it not been for the farther disposition directing the property, iu case of the death of Belva and her children, to revert to Hobbe. Held, That Belva had a life estate which, continuing beyond the life of her children, when it terminated, the equitable estate became the property of Hobbs. State vs. Garris. Rice and Garris had to secure a note mortgaged on April 21, 1886, to Schiff fc Co., on their cotton and corn crop, grown on the place of S. E. Garrie, there being no other mort gage on the same property, But on March 2, 1886, Garris had made a mortgage to R. M. White, of certain property and "all the orop of corn and cotton raised by me tho present year." He was indicted for obtaining credit on false representations in stating that there was no prior mort gage on the crop conveyed. De fendant offered to show that in re spect to the debt to Schiff he was only a surety, which was not al lowed. Held, That as the essence of the charge is an attempt to deceive, whatever tends to repel the imputa tion is admissible, and as the evi dence offered bears on the issue of an attempt to deceive, it.wa compe tent. Held, That the deed to White, sinoe it did not speoify the promises on which the crop was to be grown, was inoperative as a mortgage of the crops to be grown, and so in fact there was no misrepresentation in the statement to Schiff fc Co. that no prior mortgage of the crop had been made. State vs. Sorrell. When an indictment for retailing contains inree aisimct counts ana the Solicitor after the evidence is in elects to try on one, the effects as to the others is as if a verdict of not guilty had been rendered. But af a . t. t 1 a. I ier me jury naa renaerea tneir ver dict it would have been improper to have entered a verdict of not guilty, there having been no such verdict rendered. State vs. Taylor, 84 N. C. 773; State vs. Thompson, 95 N. V. 596. After the prosecution has produced evidence on the trial to prove the sale of spirituous liquors, the burden rests on the defendant to show that he bad a lioense. In this case the offense is charged to have been com mitted in the county of Wake and not in the city of Raleigh. Richards vs. Smith. In an action of ejectment, tho pieaaings may De amended, by con sent by inserting in the complaint the names of other plaintiffs; and further by consent the Court may allow an amendment, striking out the names of the original plaintiffs, thus chang ing the plaintiffs entirely. Where such changes are made and the com plaint alleges title in the plaintiffs, the title is alleged in those parties so coming in, and they can prove title to any part however Bmall of the premises in dispute and recover. Finly vs. Mrs. E. A. Sanders. William Saunders, being indebted to plaintiff, left the State and be came a resident of the State of Kan sas, leaving his wife in possession of a tract of land. Plaintiff brought attachment ana Mrs. Saunders claim- eu a nomesieaa in tne land, as widow. TT1 J a neia, xnata non-resident has no right of homestead; that a wife has no right of homestead in her bus band a land when he is living and has none; that a wife whose husband has deserted her is not a widow; that in some aspects she is to be treated, however, as a feme sole and can be sued without joining her husband for her torts and contracts. Tli Blair BUI. Lynchburg (Va.) Advance, Dem. Whatever may be done about, or with, the Blair educational bill, it is oertain that Senator Reagan has de livered against its constitutionality one ot tne aDiest arguments we have read against any measure whatever. We shall look with profound "in terest to what may be said in reply by the patron and friends of the measure both in the Senate and House. The constitutional point of the question cannot be successfully con troverted in our opinion, and the on ly ground upon which it can be plausibly advocated and adopted is that which too often prevails against the constitutionality of -a measure simply that of "expediency" and popular favor. . In any point of view it is a far reaching and dangerous question, and should be profoundly considered and ably argued before' it is adopted by Congress. THE LATEST NEWS. FROM ALL PAETS OF THE WORLD fFASHIXQloy. Work ol ih Committee on Elections. Uy Telegraph to tbe2ornlsR Star. Wa8HIKton. Jan. 13. The Houee Committee on Elections has disposed of :ue application of A. E. Redstone, to he &a mitted as a party to the contest in the Fifth California District. Redstone was a can didate of the United Labor party, and the returns show that he received 470 voles. He alleges that all of the 32.000 votes cast for Felton and Sullivan were fraudulent, and that be i9 therefore entitled to the seat now occupied by Felton. As he served no notice of tne contest ana nlea no evidence. the Committee on Elections has decided that there is not suficient foundation to warrant a coatest, and will so report to the House. The Committee this morning set the fol lowing dates for the consideration cf the other contested election cases: Lowry vs. White. Indiana, January 17th; McDufflD vs. uaviaaoo. Alaoama. January zist; Worthington vs. Post, Illinois, January 27tb. ILLINOIS. Organization of Northwestern Asso ciation of Tariff Reform Democrats Urgently Advocated. IBy Telegraph to the Horning Star, i Cuicago, January 13. The Executive Committee of the Democratic Stale CeDtral Committee met in this city yesterday. TLe organization of the Northwestern Associa tion of Tariff Reform Democrats ws ur gently advocated. From information al ready received, it was announced that the Stales or Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Minne sota, Michigan, Kansas, Indiana ana Mis souri were fully prepared to join a move ment of this nature, and it was decided that each 8tate should be represented by one Settle committeeman, to be hereafter select ed, whose duty it should be to collect and col lata 6uch information on the tariff question as would most thoroughly in struct the workingmen of the country npon thi9 most important question. THE NORTH WES T S TO KM. General Throughout the t erritories Kallroad Lines Entirely Blocked. fcr Telegrapn to the Morning Star.) St. Paul. Minn.. Jan. 13. A Winni peg special to the Pioneer Press says: "The storm which began yesterday morniog ex teadel throughout the territories. Nearly all of the Canadian Pacific trains have been abandoned." Bbainaed, MraN., Jan. 13. The entire lino of the Northern Pacific, from Lake Superior to Dakota, as well as the Brainard and St. Paul division, is entirely blocked by the etorro. Both of tho St. Paul trains were blocked shortly after getting out of the Minneapolis yard. rENNSTL VA SI A . Car Works at Dauphin Destroyed by Fire. By Telegrapn to the Morning Star. IIarrisiurg, Jan. 13. The car works at DauphiD, Pa., owned by Scholl & Schoop, and employing about one hun dred and fifty persons, were' destroyed by fire last night. Loss $75,000; insurance about $25,000. A Methodist church in close proximity was also burned Loss $8,000; fully insured. FLORIDA. Formal Opening- of the Ponce De Leon Hotel at St. Aagnsilne. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Jacksonville. Jan. 13 St. Augustine's lmroenso new hotel, tho Ponce De Leon and its annex, the Alcazar, were formally opened yesterday. Tne outer line of the wall of the principal structure is exactly one mile in length, and its parlors cover one-quarter of an acre. The buildings are oi Hoorisn arcnuecture. An Albany dispatch says the jury in the case oi tne state against l nomas C Piatt. to oust him from the position of quarantine commissioner or tne city of New York, on the ground that he is not a resident of that city, has returned a verdict against Piatt. OUR STATE CONTEMPORARIES. In a splendid article sg&inst the Blair Bill the Moknuso Stab says: "Let the General Government confine itself to its own sphere. Let it not violate the Consti tution to cure illiteracy or for any other purpose. Wadesboro Messenger. The eastern ttart of the Rtata rlaimn th first place on the ticket, and the Cape Fear section mat nas not oeen lepresented in the executive omce in nan a century, or more offers her distinguished and honorable Bon Maj.43. M. Stedman, at present Lieut. Governor, and in the line of nromntlnn and most admirably qualified in every way to fill the Governor's office with profit to the State and credit to himself M4 Stedman has an unsullied record and would make a good "run." Utekory Press. We mean that no nartv nnoht tn mrna nize or tolerate the office of polities broker in us ranKB, mat u to say,;a position whose lacumoem must necessarily practice the art or circumventing the will of the people by means foul or fair, so that the nolltician whose agent he is, may be foisted into power. Such a factor, in the politics of the country, whenever found out. ought to 1 4.1 1 1 ... .. O u vauuueu severely Dy oom oi tne great yaiuea. xteimer me omce nor tne man mean enough to fill it, deserves recognition at ue nanas oi respectable men or parties Tne omce la menial and dishonorable, and the man nothing better than a political out cast tiocmngnam aocket. DOBLER & MTJDGE, WHOLESALE f Paper Warehouse, Baltimore, Md. Constantly in stoek Every Variety of Paper nsed In Newspaper and Job Printing Offices, jan 5 tf REMOVAL. W. E. Springer & Co., 1 No. FRONT STREET. WE ARK NOW LOCATED AS ABOVE, AND will be pleased to serve enr customers at onr New Store in Poreell Building. Call and see ns. .dec 81 tf Plows, A,i i?. 'P11 wre. Powder, shot, Cape, Gaf . Patois, Tinware, Lamps, Lamp Goods, and all kinds ot First Class Hardware at u . ' GEO. A. FECK'S, lan 8 tf 23 Bonth Front street. - HOBS, SCYTHES, AQHICTJLTDB AL IMPLK ments. Sash, Doors, Blinds, Paints, Oils. COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MARKET STAll OFFICE Jsl 13 4 P. M. .SPIRITS TURPENTINK -The market opened firm at 40 cents per gallop. No f-alca lepcried iiOSIN Market firm at 82$ ceuts per bbl for Strained and S6 cent for Good Strained. TAR Market quoted firm at 1 00 per bbl of 280 H8., with sales at quotations. CRUDE TURPENTINE Distillers quote at $2 25 for Virgin and Yellow Dip and f 1 80 for Hard. COTTON Market quoted Bteady on a bsia cf 9 cents for middling. Quota tions at the Produce Exchange were as follow"c : Ordinary 7 ct8$2. Good Ch-dinary 8 7-16 " " Low Middling 9 " Middline 9 J " ' Good Middline 10i " " CORN Quoted firm at 60 cents for yellow in bulk, and 63 cents in sacks; while is quoted at 62 cents in bulk and 64 cents in sacks for cargoes. TIMBER-Markel steady.with quotations &s follows: Prime and Extra Shipping, flrBt class heart, $10 0013 00 per M. feet ; Ex tra $9 0012 00; Good Common Mill $4 00 5 00; Inferior to Ordinary, $3 004 00. PEANUTS Market firm. Prime C570 cents; Extra Prime 7580 cents; Fancy 8590 cents per bushel of 28 lbs. RICE Market quiet. Fair quoted at 4i 4c: Prime 55ic per pound. Rough 90c$l 00 for upland; $1 001 15 for tide water, per bushel. KKCEIFTS. Cottoc Spirits Turpentine. . . . Rosin Tar Crude Turpentine. . . - 285 biles. 211 ca&ka 763 bbls 118 bbls 332 bbls MARKETS (By Telegraph to the Prod ace Exchange.) New York, Jan. 13. 4 P. M. Cotton dull; middling uplands 10 7-16c. Spirits turpentine 421 cents per gallon. Rosin tl 071ai 12i. Cotton futures quiet and steady; opened and closed ea follows: January 10 2010 31 ; February 10 3310 38; March 10.46 10.49: April 10.54ai0.57; May 10.62 1 0. 65 ; J une 10 7010.72 ; July 10 .751 0 77 ; August 10.79ai0.82; September 10.37 10 41: October 10.03ai0.04; November 9.899.S3. Liverpool. Jan. 13, 4 P. M. Cotton dull; prices generally in buyers' favor; mid dling uplands &fd. Futures closed dull; January and February 5.34-64d, value; February and March 5.35-64d, Beller; March and April 5.3664d, seller; April and May 5 37-64d, seller; May and June 5.89 64d. seller; June and July 5 4164d, seller; July and August 5 4364d, buyer; August and September 5 44-64d, buyer. Chicago. Jan. 13. 4 P. M. Wheat May, 84f84c. Corn May, 54ic bid. Oats May. 3434c. Mess pork May $15 20. 8hort ribs cash, $7 75; May, $8 008 02. Lard May, $ 7 67. Charleston, Jan. 13. Spirits turpen tine weak and nominal. Rosin dull at 85c per bbl. London, Jan. 13, 4 P. M Spirits tur pentine 30s. DOMESTIC BIAKKK I H IBt Telegraph to the Morning 8tar.l Financial. Nbw York, Jan. 13. Noon. Money t&Bj at 3i4 per cent. Sterling exchange 4S4&484 and 486486. State bonds neglected. Government securities dull and steady. OommerciaL New York, Jan. 13. Noon. Cotton dull; sales 101 bales; middling uplands 10 7-16 cents; middling Orleans 10 9-16 cents. Flour dull and heavy. Wheat lower. Corn higherPork firm a15 25 15 50. Lard firmer at 7 TTfTSpirits tur pentine dull at 42c. Hoein dull at $1 07 1 Yi. Freights quiet and Bteady. Baltimore, Jan. 13. Flour with de creased demand. Howard street and western super $2 872 85; extra $3 003 60; family S4 00 4 35; city mills super 2 37 2 65; extra $3 003 62; Rio brands $4 75 4 87. YV neat southern firm with ac tive demand; red 9395c; amber 95a97c western higher and quiet; No. 2 winter red on spot tf 5c. Corn southern firmer white 5T58ic; yellow 6759c; western nigner ana quiet. Foreclosure. Sale. IN PURSUANCE OP A DECREE OP THE SU perior Court of New Hanover County, ren oered at tne ADril Term. 1R87. in a. civil ant inn therein pending, between Parsley fl Wiggins as Plaintiffs, and Jeremiah J. King and L Brown aa .veienaants, tne nnaersifraea Commissioner, annotated by said decree, win sell at public anc tlon, for cash, at the Court House door In the CltT of Wilmington, on MONDAY, JANUARY sora, iocs, at ix o'oiocx m., tne louowlnir PAR CEL8 OF LAND, described and hoTmrffwTV f i. lows: All the Interest, right and demand of the defendant Jeremiah J. Ring In all the real estate peionfonjctonimanaeraeea Dy vlrtne of the last win ana testament or tne late Jeremiah J, Kuur. the DrODertr herein tntnriwl ts Ka wt. veyed belne one undivided fifth intumatini rt and Premises, being the northwest one-quarter of Lot No. 5. In Block No. 101, according to the offlolal plan of the City ot Wilmington, and being ubv uio uu unuiTiaea niin interest in ixrve Grove Plantation, lying adjoining the Wilming ton Weldon Railroad, the City of Wilmington, . SOL. C. WEILL, Commissioner. This 16th of Deo.. 1S37. dec 1 630d Sale of Cotton Factory, Flouring Mil ana Oilier YalnaHle Real Estate. B YVTRTUE OF ADXXD IN TRTJ8T EXECUTED 1 to m ht A. TTInaa ont Hf. u r tii-. ?f Snrry County, recorded In Book l. Page 520 oa, Beguftr's office of Surry County, on the 26th day of June, 1883, 1 will expose to sale, at pubUo auction. In let. Airy, on Wedneeday, the 1st day of February, 1888. the following described Real Estate, lying In the town of Xt. Airy, on the Araratiiver, mown as the Hamburg Mills, eon talnlng 414 acres. On this la situated a Brick Cotton Factory, fully equipped with Machinery, jamiuio xiuurug miu, Baoe jraoiory, Store house and a number of Tenement Houses. This Is one of the finest Water Powers in Surry County. The Mill is within one mile of the Rail road, ana is one or tne nneet properties la North vuuuui. xcrma ui sate oaan. .,, V. C. BUXTON. Trustee. December 25. 1887. deo 8 tds THE CELEBRATED ARRINGTOH BAME FOILS FOR SALE GAME FOWLS HAVE A NATIONAL R3 PxiiiS't JP19 have lought and won a aeries ot lae greatest mams ever fono-ht on thin nr tm ?TiSr,it!Pilt?n.Iltl "Fifteen rlr, on exhibition - t-ifzxT-jfu " h were nonorea Dy toe uni ted SUtee Oentennlal Commissioner with the Dl pioma and HedaL idA and most approved "r rty viwovi MiHi, i wui Bnrp spienaKi COCKS, of fine slxe and handsome plumage, pet SHBNS, SSjM and ta.00 each; or 17.00 per Pair P'Trlo- Iexpeet to raise Two Hundred Irs thla, Summertha Flneet Game In the AprUhatch during-the months of August, 8ep- Jwnberand October, at Five Dollars per Pair. Of wPlei back the assertion with their stampi . Address, - -J. O. AERIN9TON, ' u rr -' ..muiardrton. Nash Co. N.C. A Scaly, Itching, Skin with Endleag SufTcrin by Cntlcura Remedies. I I had known of thi rimn-.. twenty-eight years a?o it vcoul havt- l.t:'!E5 wiu(iw)Dunarea collars) anc i lr" acnoant of salTering. ay dWea-e , ';uatLss commenced on my head ia a b- - Mj!,:a-ic) nan a cent, it SDres-a ranirtiv . -eer and got under my nails Vhi seaks u', f iJl.1 rr.v cv u UrO!) endless, and without relief. Ouethon 1 5 v&i lars would not temjt me to hv-e tbiiJi V,. C0:' l am a poor man. out ree', i5ch to b ri.r what f ome of the cocors taii waV",i: f,f some ring-worm, psoriasis '!0s;. . . . isarsaparuifcs over ne year v,, i, an(i no cure I went to two or tbree doc-tc" iJU: cure I cannot pra:b the cticcri i-5 Eo too much. They have made rrv EU:E and free from tcales as a fiabvf. ait them was three boxes of utri-ra 1 "f bottles ot CtmctTRA Hrsoi.TKvr a.n ." 1Lrte of CunctrRA Ho a. If you had 1-Mn cai!T? said you wjuld hve cured me fo- aaa would have had the money. I ' .0kei r- y2u picture In your boot of Pro:lasbs(DicUTf.----two, "How to Cure Pkin Diseases'') ti'M r uuuiri auy jjensuii ever Was "Vr ' lorce of habit I rub my hands nvw ..." u,-u legs to .scratch once In awhile, tut to pose. IamaUwelL 1 scratched twtnt- r." years, and it got to be a kind of seco- d rf 5 to me. I thank you a thousand timesAcv' more that you want to Know write me o- ' one wno reiu icus may write me and I wi'' swer It. DKNMS Di.WNi''; "n" Watmstjet, Vt., Jan. 20tb, 3887. Paorlasls, Eczema, Tet Pruritus, 8call Head, Milfc Cruet, Danaraff pb bers BakerV, Grocers' and WasaervvoEaril Scaly, itmply Humors of the Skin and Soa -j , 1 Blood, with Loss of Hair, are positive"? curtu b, ;T;vti: "'irr.'' -r4""- Jumiae Cuticcra. the great fekln Cnre. and ( ,-t itfl:... coir, an eiquuiiie rain ueauurier fXtna,,Y and Cutictba Rb solve: r, th9 new u'.ch d P'-r,i' Internally, when physicians &nd a'a cxt-- r- r aies ran. Sold everywhere. Price. Cunccni. .Vr , 25c.; Rssolykht, $1. Prepared by ili i 0 - URVd AND CHEMICAL CO.. liOStOn. W: 25 i S 8t-nd for "How to Care rkia JM?e;r pages. 50 lilustranona. and Ito testitno-'. a TJT'KSrPI'ES. Black-head", chapped ;.r, A A uL ekin preveDtei by Curicr;A CATED fcOAP. FREE! FREEFRuMPAUr l In one minute tbe rntiram jf VAull-Paln IMactor rt Rheumatic, ficiatio, Sudden, tu-,' and Nervous Pains, Strains and vrea'sntt. v'.'. first and only pain killing Plaster c-mj. ja 1 D&Wlm wed Sat nrp, A little higher ia price, but of unrivaiki OUR CONSTANT AIM IS TO MAKf TKM TMi riNEST IN THE WORLD." de 15 1v tu th sat Is an invaluable remedy for SICK HEADACHE, TORPID LIVER, DYSPEPSIA, PILES, MALARIA, C0SWENESS, AND ALL BILIOUS DISEASES. Sold Everywhere. feb 17 D&W ly tu th sa TYLER DESK CO 1ST. LOUIS, MO. Mahutrs of Ffne UteNb BANK COUNTERS, OAtnr rrtTTRT TTOTTT'P. GQVXBirHEirr work I Txcr7w T-nwwit Prices r- KYI n. Tlinst'i! j kiwiw r. - CtUlogac,ripett erer printed. ent free. Postarejc nov 1 3m tu th eat rut mm Its principle iDgredientPwre MraU is scientifically formulated with medical remedies, mving it won derfully BttmulatiaK properties; invigwratme- tne Vitl forces without f abtruinsr the difrestave orvans. In Typhoid, Yellow and Malarial f eversjt is in VAluAble, in vine strenjrth to overcome the?e malij? nant diBesMsa. Highly recommended by leading dv BloAns of Paris as a tonic for Convalescents and V eal. peracoishK) for lun diseases. E.Vnniteraekl. o. ajgentaTK. Y. SOLD BY t.t. DKUGGlaTa. lv 28 y Fat SHORT CUT w B HAVS TH3 SEORT CUT" AT MA a T0S A short ent on frosts. A Short cut on qjx transportation North. A short cut on rlcii sou for early vegetables. . These are all established facts. We live las wonderful age, and there Is no telling vrhat ce velonmenta are near at hand. Buy a Fann stir the soil. "Go till the ground." said God to man, "Subdue the earth, It shall be thine Only a few years henoe and land will be he yond price In this section. , ,. I will take pleasure In helping any body wbojb PUSHING and BNTKRPRISINt to bay a Farm In this community, commissions or no com mis Bions. O. H BLOCKEK, oo 19 tf Real Estate Agent. Maxton, THE CLIMATE, THE SOIL, JjOR TRUCK G ARDBNING.AND RAPID TRA' sit North, cannot be surpassed In any section c North Carolina as we find It at TVT A -STT'OHST. Only twenty-two hours from Baltimore. No killing irosts until late In winter. Ea gardens In Spring. A few good Farms yey"' sale, but rapidly selling, live and enwrpris J farmers and gardeners have an enviable io?Pur tunlty lust now. Apply to O. H. BLOCKKk.. oct 18 tf Real Estate Agent, MaxtoDJl PARIS AND LANDS FOR SALE. IMPROVED LANDS, TIMBERED LAJp SWAMPLANDS and TOWN PROPERTIES The Counties of Robeson, Bladen. Comber. and all adjacent sections, offer fine oppooci ties for investment. The opening of direct rau ways North aake the SHOE HEEL section NEW AND INVITING FIELD for Trucking, dening and Fruit. Climate and hygiene acw" tages unsurpassed In any oountry. A conv. L point for freights. Railways North, South, borUcultuxlata IOome and see or write to n TI R LOCKER Real Estate Agent, Waxtn, Eobesoa Co.. N-u 1 -StSE -"Tl DUOflQ HUME my K DAWtf
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 14, 1888, edition 1
2
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