Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / June 23, 1888, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
V I 1 h 1 'Mr ' 1 ' ? If 4 fi Hi r k 'I , r ill 4 i I'. 1 A In Fhe; Morning Starv 1 s U RDAY MOENHTO, JlJNK 23, 1888 National Democratic Ticket. For President : GROVER CLEVELAND, I - of New York. For Vice-President : ALLEN G. THURMAN, of Ohio. For Presidential Electors at Large : ALFRED M. WADDELL, of New HanoTer'Coaoty. FREDERICK N. STRUDWICK, of Orange County, state Democratic Ticket. For Governor : DANIEL G. FOWLE, of Wake County. For Lieutenant-Governor : THOMAS M. HOLT, of Alamance County.I For Secretary of State : WILLIAM L. SAUNDERS, of Wake County. For State Treasurer : DONALD W. BAIN, of Wake County. For State Auditor : GEORGE W. SANDERLIN, of Wayne County. V r Superintendent of Public In struction : SIDNEY M. FINGER, of Catawba County. For Attorney-General : THEODORE F. DAVIDSON, of Buncombe County. For Judges Supreme Court : JOSEPH J. DAVIS,: of Franklin County. JAMES E. SHEPHERD, of Beaufort County. ALPHONSO C. AVERY, of Burke CouBty. J i DGE SCHENCK ON TELE BATTLE OF GUILFORD COURT HOUSE. ?he study of history is of much importance. It is both disciplinary and instructive. To know fairly .veil the leading historical events of the world is the portion of every man who would be considered as in formed and intelligent. The battle of Guilford Court House, and its forerunners, the victory of Morgan in South Carolina and that at King's AkuDtain, had more to do with bringing the war between the Colo- i and Great Britain to a success f .i issue than any other battles of seven years' war. To under id the importance of the victories Morgan and the North Caroli ne, assisted bv troorjs from mm irginia and South Carolina, at King's Mountain, you can not do better than to read s-ith care the excellent address of Jge David Schenck, of Greens ro, delivered on 5th May, 1888, at jt Guilford battle ground. We h o received from that able gentle man a copy. It is well printed and ra.kes a stout pamphlet of 74 pages. Wo found it very interesting read ing. It is clearly written, and the cc'irse of events is well stated while tlm philosophical bearing of each upon those that followed is con biantly kept in view. It is really a valuable addition to North Carolina iii tory and should be very generally rad. History is more or less fable at" best. It is, therefore, of the utmost consequence that the grains of wheat should be winnowed and separated irom the Schenck cockle and cheat. Judge has performed his na. . trio tic labor of love with earnest assiduity, with careful dis crimination, and with a sincere de sire, we must believe, to find the ex act truth relative to the Guilford Court House battle. The amount of misrepresentation and ignorance that has gtown up around that battle. which proved to be the turmnff- point in the war, is absolutely as tounding. Writers have been both r careless and ignorant, and some-have beea unjust and slanderous from de- signy we apprehend. . Judge Schenck gives a rapid but , lucid account of events immediately C" preceding" the battle that was fought ont 15 th March, .1781. He enables . the reader to see how extremely im- ; portant was that hotly contested field . -bow far reaching its consequences. If Lord Cornwall is had -succeeded, at Guilford he would have soon had h V prth" Carolina : indi Virginia ; under his feet. He: was sent into the South 4o ver-run the" four Satfts. that were fvoboldin resistance." eoriaiana Socth Carolina 7ere rrctr?v-:!:ca .he entered North; Carolina. Judee Schenck; graphically describes what awaited him -how. he was dnyen.to desperation and was forced to deliver battle at Guilford against large odds, but with an army of; almost un equalled discipline and courage. In the history of wars no braver army ever fought than that commanded by Cornwallis at Guilford. . The main point of Judge Schenck's discussion is to repel the falsehoods of slanderers, to vindicate the truth of history, and to do justice to the gallant North Carolinians who fought ontht bloody day. This he has done with marked research and abili ty. He not only shows how many North Carolinians fought at Guilford under Greene, but how many fought under Morgan in his brilliant victory in South Carolina. In the last bat tle named there were 310 North Car olinians. At Gniiford Court House thore were 500 Volunteer Riflemen excellent troops from North Car olina, and two brigades of Militia. These brigades were Butler's, from Granville and Orange counties, and Eaton's, from Bute , and Halifax. Bute county was afterwards divided into Warren and Franklin. The North Carolina Militia behaved admirably, as the historian shows from a considerable number of trust worthy and independent, witnesses. They performed with gallantry the hazardous and most important work assigned them that day by the com mander, Gen. Greene. According to British, Virginian and North Caroli nian testimony they were very effect ive in their perilous advanced posi tion, and delivered two very deadly fires before they retreated. They were nearly a quarter of a mile in advance of the other troops with the exception of supports on either wing, and they were entreated by Greene to give the enemy two volltes and then retreat to the rear. This com mand was faithfully executed, and with terrific destruction to the Brit ish. All this is kclearly established by many witnesses. The last volley was given at not more than forty yards distant. A rapid retreat then began which got into something like a stampede. Remember, they were but undisciplined, raw militia, just from the plough. It was time to get away from an advancing column of the best troops on earth, and they with bayonets, whereas the militia had only old-fashioned rifles that it took quite two minutes to load. It is proved beyond doubt that some of the North Carolina militia even remained to deliver a third volley, which was more than their General had asked them to do. The battle is described at length, and with painstaking care and elab oration. North Carolina's 500 rifle men were in the thick of the fight and even "Licht Horse Harrv" Gen. Robert E. Lee's father, who was prejudiced and slandered North Carolina bears witness to the splendid gallantry of the men of Guilford and Alamance under For- bis, who "refused to fly even before the British bayonet." To understand the battle and see what North Caro lina really did you must read Judge Schenck's luminous and conclusive vindication. The authorities intro duced must forever settle the ques tion of how North Carolinians bore . themselves on their own soil on 15th March, 1781. The additional testimony, to which the Stab recently drew atten tion, supplied thirty years or more since 1 by Mr, James Banks, of Fayette ville, will' forever preclude honest and truthful men from slan dering the brave men who staked life and all at Guilford's bloody fight. We thank Judge Schenck for the conclusiveness of his histori cal investigation: for the forceful and convincing manner with which the investigation has been' made; and for the great service he has done to his native North Carolina in this thorough and complete vindication. THE FLATFOBD OP MOW POLY. : It would be dreary work to review aV length the deliverances of aregn. lation Republican Convention. All know of what material it is composed. Office holders and office-seekers make up one of these bodies. Boodle, bun come, blarney and bluster are the main staples, and ruin, rascality and radicalism are the. three R's that give cohesiveness and efficiency to the body. - They go for office first, last, all the time. So what they put in platforms is of no consequence. It is composed entirely of pretence, hum- buggery and falsehood. The sole aim is to deceive." Clap-trap and "glit .wring generalities"; - are the real piaaksi v .; Ty v: I .The simpleton Id the 'Greek fable I iwent around with ft brick to show I ' ? . . .' i -f.-i. j : .. . :.. . . ...... l-rrbst kind of a housg he h'ad 'A Te- solution one plank-r-ln a Republi can platform-is all that is needed to tell what sort of a Btruotpre they have put up. Built on quicksand and of rotten timber it is not, expected to last beyond the next election,. People have been fooled so often by the Radical cry of "wolf" and their sweet declarations of love 'for the sweating toilers that they can. be bamboozled no longer. Henoe it is the bloody-shirt or nothing The delegates at a Republican Conven tion go about with a brick in their hats and think that the laborers will be well satisfied with the en woven meshes and sugared baits that are in tended to please the unsuspecting flies who may be persuaded just once more "to walk" into the Republican little "parlor." The one issue before the country is the reduction of taxation the oloBing out of, the corrupting and dangerous surplus and the cutting down of the War Tariff with its giant and grinding monopoly. But Radicalism like Bourbonism in France never learns until too late. Hear the office holders and office seekers convention at Chicago: "We are uncompromisingly in favor of the American system of protection. We protest against its destruction as proposed by the President and his party. We denounce the Mills bill as destructive to the general business, labor and farming inter ests of the country." Here Tt is again: the old Republi can cry of "Wolf, wolf." But is ' anybody fooled? "The President and his party" find a huge War Tax of 47 per cent, average on thousands of articles and a steady accumulation of $100,000,000 annually of surplus, for which there is no need whatever. This money is taken from the peo ple, carried to the Treasury and locked in its vaults. It is proposed to begin the work of rednotion. "The President and bis party" are so mod erate and so careful not to give any just complaint of "destruction to the general business, labor and farm ing interests of the country" that they only ask for a very small re duction at this time but a trifling 7 per cent. This leaves the War Tariff still a great Protection Juggernaut, to grind and oppress and rob. And yet the demagogues at Chicago are howling and squealing over the pre tended "destruction." - But this is positively too "thin" to deceive the most ignorant. This body of oflSoe-holders and offloe seekers say: 'If there shall still remain a larger re venue than is requisite for the wants of the government, we favor the entire repeal of internal taxes rather than the surrender of any part of our protective system " This noble army of teat-suckers and teat seekers prefer free whiskey, "free chaws," free smokes to free blankets, free wool hats, free traoi chains, free crockery, free window glass, free cotton ties, free medicine, free clothing, and free Bibles. But the American people will record a different verdict." They will not heed what the agents of Money Kings and greedy Monopolists shall say. They will not indorse the prin ciple that it is right' to make fifty nine millions work to enrich a half million. They will not by their votes declare that when a Republican Su pretne Court decided that a revenue for Protection was "robbery," that the highest judicatory was wrong. For the Bur. UGHTN 1NG RODS. Mb, Editor : -In your paper of the 20tb, I notice a clipping from the Electrical Review on the efficiency of lightning rods, which speaks of them as a "relic of superstition." 1 be Jie vieto may base this statement on snob m - . 1 . . - r . I acts as to mue it quite aatisiaoiory to itself, but I not have seen pub lished a statement of such facts. I know that not only did the late Prof. Henry, as you state, but also that many of the ablest pbysioiste of to day believe lightning rods, when properly put up, to be an efficient protection to the house during a thunderstorm. Tbere can be little doubt but that in many oases lightning rods on a house do no good at all, and that in other cases they may may do a posi tive barm. Unless the rods can be put up in the proper manner, they had better not be put up at all. Every rod should (1) be put in the ground deep enough to come-in con tact with perpetually moist Barth; or if the, ground be dry to great depths, as in sandy soils; the rod should run into a sewer, cesspool, cistern or well. (2) The rod should not be allowed to touch the roof especially a metallic roof. (3) It should extend several feet above the top of the chimney ; and (4) large houses should have sev eral rods. - The first of the- above mentioned points is the one generally neglected. Many people seem to think that if the lower end Of the rod is stuck in the ground a foot or so and the upper end extends a foot or so above- the chimney everything is safe. - A few years ago I assisted the Professor, of Physics, at Cornell .University (who is high enoughan authority in eleo tricity to command a salary of t 10, 000 a year) -test -the effioienoy of : the .lightningi. rc s ron- the University buildincrsr Everything above ground appeared to be in jthe best condition, and yet it was found that, the rods would hardly-carry 'down as muph electricity! as ordinarily passed along a' telephone wire;- The difficulty was soon discovered. The. aoil was dry, gravelly and sandy, and the "rods ex tended down into it only a few eet. Dry soil is a poor conductor of elec. tricity," and It wasfound necessary to extend the rods to such a depth as tp find moist, soil, . or carry them, to sewers, cesspools and cisterns. . , In a dry, sandy . soil like ; that of Wilmington, a lightning rod, , the lower end, of whioh stopsju. this dry soil, had perhaps better be regarded as a "relic of superstition" and be taken down or extended deeper until its reaches water or moist soil. J. A. Holmes, University of N. O., June 20, '88. CUURKXT COMMEN'f It is not proposed to entirely relieve the country of this taxation. It must be extensively continued as the source of the Government's in come; and in a readjustment, of our tariff the interests of American labor engaged in manufacture should be oarefnlly considered as well as the preservation. of our manufacturers. It may be called protection, or by any other name, but relief from the hard ships and dan g era of our present tariff . laws should be devised with especial precaution against imperil ing the interests of our manufactur ers. President Cleveland's Message. Why should any man refuse to vote with delight for a-reduction in a system of taxation that does not increase his wages and does increase the prices of his food and clothing ? Why should not every man be only too glad of the opportunity to aid in cutting down a system of taxation that, instead of multiplying, really diminishes the buying power of bis wages ? Paying a man for his la bor as little as be will consent to take, and then increasing the cost of the necessaries of his every day life by, on the average, nearly one half, is oalled "protecting" him. Was there ever such deceitfulness, such, false pretense, found in any word before? Protection! It is a "de lusion, a mockery and a snare." Richmond State, Dem. We are hearing a good deal just now about convention oratory. When Demosthenes said that oratory is action, he meant acting. All the great orators, from Demosthenes to Beecher Cicero, Chatham, Mira beau, O'Connell, Clay, Prentiss, Ingersoll have been great actors. In this sense Webster was not an orator; for his was not the appeal of the actor to the emotions, but the slow, measured arguments of the jurist to the intellect of his hearers. Many changes have come over the oratorio art, however, and that which passed for eloquenoe thirty or forty years ago would be dismissed as mere bathos now. To be sure a fine voice and graceful address will al ways command a certain vogue. But behind these there must be subject matter, pertinent and direct. The average audience will no longer listen to mere noise, nor submit to verbal redundancy and flourish no matter how reoonant and florid.--Louisville Courier Journal, Dem. Kiag noaoptly Ja Cfcalr m Chicago. Philadelphia Record, Dem. The first offioial acts of the Re publican National Convention at Chi cago have fixed upon it a monopolis tic character which may be expected to betray itself throughout the entire proceedings of that body. That the only candidates for temporary chair man and permanent chairman of the Convention should have been leading representatives of railroad interests demonstrates what an influence these interests exercise npon the Republi can party. It is notorious that the California delegation was selected by Senator Stanford and his associates in the interest of the great railroad monopoly which they control. The Vice President of the Central Pacific Rail road "Company, its leading attor ney and its "General NewB Agent" are members of the delegation, while Kstee, the permanent Chairmin of the Convention, was the unsuccessful railroad candidate for Governor of California in 1882. The selection of a leading repre sentative of the railroad monopolies to preside over the Chicago Conven tion shows how little the Republican party hesitated to identify - itself openly with these monopolies and how muoh-tbe party relies upon them for support. FOr.1TCMii roiN TH. - Blaine's Newcastle (Eng.) nod to the blind horse7 at Chicago ought to be quite as good as a wtnk. PAO, Record, Dem "The bandana kite is a big one and thereby hangs a tail an unsullied record of forty years of public eervice." Duluth Paragrctpher.' 1 No 'President who has been nominated for a second term has been de feated, with the twe exceptions of - John Qalncy Adams and Martin Van Buren. Tne rule has been re-election. 'Phil. Record, Dem. . Grover Cleveland, with his matchless record and' his brilliant promise, stands before the country as the choice of. the Democratic party for its highest honor: He is no longer .an untried man, Tor more than three years , he has guided the national policy nrmly,. skilfully and safe ly. fie has ' been equal to every demand, 'San JFVanciace Examiner. FlrstClass Pianos. 3. Jit. Stone, of Raleigh,- 1s : the largest Piano, and Organ deafer in the South.' He has been j weil; and iavorably ..known throughout vthia J&ate lor the past fifteen J ears. He is not ageat-f or aay-'-ne" make ut handles sixteen, different - kinds -pianos and sells them from $10 upwards i .The celebrated Emerson piano is the oniy instrument m tne : world that Is war- WILM.INQ TO N MARKET --y" - . JsTAIt OFFICE. June 23. 4 Vi. r? I SPIRITS TURPZNTIirE--The saarket opened steady at 83 cents reraloo. with saTes of receipts at quotations ' . ROSIN Market dull at 82 J cent per hbl ior Strained and 137 i cents for Good Stxaiaed. ! TAR Market quoted firm at i 40 ir bbir Of 280'lbs.r with sales at -quota tions. CRUDE TURPENTINE Distillers quote the market quiet at 2 (X) for Virgin, $1 60 for Yellow Dip and f 1 00 -for Hard. COTTON Market quoted "steady on a basis of 9 cents for middling. Quo tations at the Produce Exchange were as follows: OrrfiTiarv. 6 Ct8?lt. PGood Ordinary 8 15-16 - " Low Middling o l-io Middlinjc H Good Middling 13-16 " " HEOEIFTS. Cotton . 1 beJe 260 casks 473 bbls 103 bbls 209 bbls Spirits Turpentine. ltosin Tar Crude Turpentine. DO ITI KS TIC MARKETS. Financial Kin Iokk. Jane 21 - Noon. Honey easy at 1H per cent. Sterling exchange 487487r and '488 4S8. State bonds neglected. Government securities dull but firm. 7 Haw York. June 23. Evening Sterling exchange dull but steady. Money easy at It per cent. Government securities dull but steady to firm; four per cents 128; four and half per cents 107. State bonds dull but steady ', North Carolina sixes 120: fours 94. Commercial. New Yobk, June 22. Noon. Cotton qaiet; sales 220 bales; middling uplands iu ft-ioc; miaxuing uneans iu 7-100. inonr steady. Wheat lower. Corn irregular. Pork stead v at t!5 25&15 50. Lard steady at $8 608 52. Spirits turpentine steady atS63dic Rosin steady at $1 151 17f Freights qoiet. Nxw Yobx, June 22. Evening. Cotton quiet; sales of 404 bales; uplands 10 5-16c; Orleans 10 7-ioc; net receipts at ail u. a ports to-day 1,622 bales; exports to Great Britain 9.448 bales; to France bales to the continent 2,515 bales; stock at all TJ. 8. ports 805,016 bales; cotton state ment for the week: net receipts at New York 806 bales, gross receipts 15,651 bales: exports to Great Britain 10.837 bales. to France 741 bales, to the continent 1,050 bales; forwarded 8.652 bales; sales 2,785 bales; sales to spinners 1.665 bales; stock in New York 175,699 bales. Southern flour quiet and unchanged. Wheat lower, with little business, closure weak: No. 2 red Jane I 8540870, cloeinc at 851c: July 8608710. Uorn ralrly active and lower, closing weak; no. 7 junetHc; July nji55c, closing at osfc uair quiet ana steady; options shade lower and only moderately active; no. a spot 34rc Hops quiet and nn changed. Coffee dull and nominal at 14 75 for fair Klo on spot; options quiet, 'closing w points tower on jane: no. 7 luo Jury $10 65 10 57; August $9 859 95. Sugar firm; refined firm. Molasses dull at 19 J c for 50 test. Rice steady, Petroleum steady; crude in barrels 66fc; refined steady at 7tc ror in re ports, cotton seed oil crude 43c; refined 47Q48C. Tallow more active but easier. Rosin steady at $1 15Q1 17 for strained to good. Spirits turpentine" irregu lar at w(30tc. Hides dull and un changed. Wool quiet. Pork quiet and Steady. Tierced beef dulL Cut meats quiet aoa uncnangea; miaaaes aim and nominal Lard stronger and quiet; western steam on spot 98 CO; June $3 46. Freights steady. wiwn net receipts bales; gross re ceipts 1.880 bales: futures closed stead v. with tales of 89.200 bales at the following ? notations: June 10. 23&10.24c;Juy 10.24 a 25c; August 1Q.8S&10.84C; September 8.77 a 7Hc; October 9.579.5Sc; .Novem ber and December 9. 48. 49c; January 9.56 9 57o; February 9.649.65c; March 9.72 9.73c;Aprn 9. 80. 81c; May 9. 88 9. 89c Hubbard. Price & Oo.'s. cotton circular to day says: Trading in contracts has shown only moderate animation, with the direct demand confined principally to Au gust, but a sustaining undertone was found with prices 2 to 4 points higher, closing steady at about the best prices of the day. CaiOA.eo.Jane 22. Cash quotations were as follows: Flour neglected. Wheat No. 2 spring 98i98Jc; No. 2 red, 8080ic. Corn No. 2, 447c. Oats No. 2 81c. Mess pork $13 60. Lard, per 100 lbs S8 15. Short rib sides $7 40; dry salted shoulders boxed $6 00 6 25; short clear aides boxed $7 607 65. Whiskey $1 2a The leading futures ranged as follows opening, highest and closing: Wheat No. 2 June Wi. 80, 79; July 80. 81, 79. Corn 4 Ho. 8 June 48. 48. 47; July 49, 49, 47c. Oats No. 2 June 81. 81. 81 ; July 80. 81, 80. Mess pork July $13 60, 13 60, 13 6Q: August $18 60, 18 70, 13 70. Lard per 100 lbs July $8 20, 8 20, 8 17; August $8 25, 8 80, 8 87. Short ribs July $7 421: 7 45. 7 45; August $7 52, 7 52. 7 60, St. Louis. June 22. Flour easj and unchanged. Wheat opened with an up ward tendency under unfavorable weather reports, but it soon fell off and when Chi cago broke prices here went down with a man and closed fi&lc below vesterdav No. -a reu caan C0033fc; JUiy 7f80c, closing at 79c. Corn opened 'firm and closed f ! below yesterday No. 2 cash, 4445c; July 4445& Oats easier, cash 8333c bid,, according to location: June 82c. Whiskey steady at,$l 14: Pro visiona very dull; nothing but small Job and order trade done. fiJiLTTjcoxti, June 22. Flour strong but steady. Wheat southern, old firm and nominal; Fultz 8590c; Longberry 8792o; first arrivals new to-day; prime seUingat $1 12; fair at $1 00. in all about 250 bushelar western dull and weak; Na 2 winter red on spot and June 85c Corn southern-steady and firm; white 58a60c: yellow 6860c. - CrjNCXHNATi,tJune 20.; Flour in mod erate demand. Wheat , dull No. 2 red 87c. Corn easy No. 2 mixed 51c . Oats dull and lower No. 2 mixed 85c Poik dull. Lard quiet. Bulk meats dull. Ba con easy. Whiskey quiet at $1 14. Hogs steady. COTTON BUBZBTB. ; By Telegraph to the .Morning Star. June 23. Galveston, steady at 9 7-16c net receipts bales; Norfolk, steady at 106 net receipts 407 bales; Baltimore, quiet and steady : at 10o net receipts bales: Boeton,quiet at 10c-net receipts 1058 bales; Philadelphia, quiet at lOjcr-net receipts 16 bales; Savannah, Jinn at 9fc-net receipts 98 bales; New Orleans, qaiet and steady at file net receipts 208 bales: Mobile, firm at 9c net receipts 10 bales; Memphis, firm at Sic net receipts 21 bales; Augusta, firm, at 913-16C net receipts 77 bales; Charleston. Hurck rjir ire rcceipvs na DaiCH. runsiHRKUKKBTt. BTCble to the Morning' Btar.' -' ; LrvxarooL. J. j tme " 22'1 v noon:--rvrt trt firm. with, fair demand-r-middllno' J5d; Orleans 5 9-16d; Sales of 10,100 baler, j tt,. flrmJrmd deliverv 8 81-64d: Jane and July delivery 0 Sl-641 July and August delivery 0 w-oa ; adsu vy Ur delivery 5 29 64d; September and Oc tober delivery 5 1964d; October and No vember delivery 5:i4-64di November and December delivery 6 12 64di September de liffry fi29-64d. 1 -. - ' ' - Tenders of .cotton. 100 bales new docke, 800 old docket. - ' - - " - - Sales of cotton for the week 70.000 bales, or which 51.000 .bales were Ameri can; speculators -took 1,800 - baleer porters took, -8700 bales;-forwarded from ships' side direct to s pi bo era 1.800 bales; actual . export 6,700 - -bales; totaL.impoxt 51.000 "bales, of which 87,000 are Ameri can; total stock 678.000 pales, or which 50,800- bales , are American; total afloat 6,600 bales, of which 2,000 bales are American. - ? ; -!i ' ' Sales of American to-day include 8,500 bales. Wheat flat; demand; poor; holders offer freely. California No. 1, 6s6s 8d; red western spring 6s 6d6s 7d Iiecelpts for the past three days 183,000 centals, inclod' leg 12.000 American. Com dull; demand poor. Receipts of American for the past three days 19,800 centals.- LrvxBrcoi- June 22, 4 P. M. Cotton Uplands (1 ra c) June 5 80-64d. buyer; June and July 5 80-64d, buyer; July and August 5 3064d, seller ; . August - and Sep tember 5 29-64d, seller; September and October 6 18-64d, value; October and No vember 5 18-64d, buyer; November and December 6 ll-64d. buyer; December and January 5 1 ll64d, value; September 0 29-64d. seller. Futures closed quiet New vorm cMparmUT cotton sta.ee- New Yokx, June 22. The following is the comparative cotton statement for the week ending this date: 1887. 1888. Net receipts at all United States ports during the week 1.882 3,633 Total receipts to this ' date . . -. 5.426.699 5.208,511 Exports for the week. . 34,806 10,135 Total exports to this date i 4.881,933 4,227,725 Btock m all United States ports 805.016 Stock at all interior towns, Macon; not re ceived 27.690 Stock in Liverpool 676.000 'American? afloat for 287,885 13,849 853,000 ' Great Britain 20,000 7,000 syrvp or VXk Is Nature's own true laxative. It is the most easily taken, and the most effective remedy .known to Cleanse the System when Bilious or Costive; to Dispel Headaches, Colds, and Fevers; to Cure Habitual Con stipation, Indigestion, Piles, etc. Manu factured only by the California Fig Syrup Company, San Francisco, Cal. : At wholesale and retail by Robt. R. Bmxamt. X Tho Wilmington, N. G, Star. OLDEST DAILT IN THE STATE. WAIk n.BBRNARV,EllorMdPropr NOTICES OF THE PRESS. It U honeet and able. Hickory TYtt A lire and progreesfre Dafiy. Raleigh yitiior. It is the best Daily Pins in the Etato. Clin ton uaMcatian, IttebTfeht. fresh. TUUboro Horn. rtroron and scholarly. It Is a credit to the brightest type Bta. OcUUboro Argue. of lonrnal- Our admirable and most porary. WUeon Mirror. exoeUent content- As the 8ta crows older its brtUIancr acreaaes. CharlotU Obterver. Dy odds, the brightest and beet Dazlt in Borta Carolina. SaAorU JExpm. Stands first among the leadlnr Datuzs In the State, and second to none tn the South. Eock kvkatn Moclut. v It Is the beet jratberer and condenser of news tn the State. . Bold, outspoken acd fear leas. HVwn Advanc. Stands at the hied of all North Carolina pa pers. Banks with the best of oar Southern Dallies. GrtenvxOt BtJUctor. In all that can. make a Dajlt uo Wkxkxt valuable the WrumreroH Stab stands to day the peer of any. A'euhvUl Courier. It la a splendid JonrnaL Is f earleosly honest, and iU expressed opinions carry great weight because of the confidence its readers feel inlts honesty. Kintton fret iYos. The WnJllWuM 8tax I In Out twTit.flT mi of Its pubnoaUon. which is the longest existence ipa any oairy nas ever attained In North Caro Una. Janwrr Mtporter-Fvt, The Wxurarerow Etam Is In the twentv-flret year of publication, and Is a first class Dally. The literary feature of the editorial department Is especially good aad cannot be dnpuoated by any otter Daily Tatxm in the State. Hendenon ville Timet. mji tf yylm !We ;Na. le, a. fi vv ' . 1 m t ebSBD&Wiy ta th sat' nria chw A Noted Divine Oayo: l MI lkTO besn Kaias; Tattle jTriI la vrvyepepaisu wssK stevaacJa SoetlvejMes, witla wblela I tiare iless; ARE A SPECIAL BLESSING. I vr bsvd aaytnln lmeeiBnebi rooa. M. rMeommtad Uimb te all as tie lest metllelne In xlstanee.' j ' BT. F. K. OQOOO, Hew 1Tk. SOLD ETEfiYWHEEE. Office. 44 Mnrray St4 New York. 111 ' lisi u f. JJ HE 6 TANNHAE USER EEEn is A Special Brewing of the B2SG- NEB & ENGEL BREWING COV PANY, and unauestionabiv tp? m. EST LIGHT BEER EXTAt t. brewed from the finest PALE CAN ADA WEST BARLEY MALT and SAA ZEB HOPS, and HIGHLY RECOM MENDED for ita TONIC and NUTRI TIVE QUALITIES. ELEGANTLY PACKED FOR FAMILY USE The high reputation enjoyed by the BERGNER & ENGEL COMPANY is due to th,e fact that oniy the FINEST AND BEST MATERIALS are used and that the greatest SKILL and CARE aro ex ercised during it3 manufacture. The BREWING CO. PHILADELPHIA, tn th sa my 21 A IitUe higher in price, but of mimaUm i-uaiin. CONSTANT FINEST AIM IS TO MAKE THCM TME IN THE WORLD." de 15 lv tn tn Bat PENGERIAN TEEL FINS Are the Best, INTmESSmiAL QUALITIES OF Durability, Evenness of Point, and Workmanship' ... . .(1.00 torn for trial of 1 8 different Ftyipf JsoS of lOeentainBtaiiii!4 IYlS0Hf BUUCEMAN . GO. , -J6 21T nrzn sat DUGRO'S umm i formnUtetT -with medical remedies. the TitaJ fStrt f aWln the .l In TrrBoni,YKLLaw and Malabial , fe erwae. mJuabis, glTlnir treortn to oStuwrBif B&1 FRENCH CAPSULES . . . r-i a t c n WIATHEY-CAYLUS A test of SO TEAKS wpw. rZe in Cua per bottte ot M Oapeaiee. je is ly sat Twenty-Five Cents Only Trttmn. H. T. World. JUnjUed P" pair Ion Book lUnxlnM. LlbrBrleB. o-. l Hahers' prices, tlwtT on nana w haEBis', 5 r 1 BEMMEB im una popular rotoeay, vy "i. ft is bth" 3 i I I nl au, Bh 28 tt A few rters of stabi . p S3 tt 1 ; Fopnlu Vtiwt w ' - mImsW
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 23, 1888, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75