Iter's Annouoflinneni, 1US XOHHlHa STAR. IB eldest iaiiy aw Mf la North Carolina's pablUaed dally. i ep Hondsy, at $c 00 per year. Si 00 lot ux Months, SI M for three months; M eta for on month, to aall tatMorlbert. Delivered U city rabeerlbera f t the rate of It oeau per week for any period frazaooe week to one year. THE WEEKLY STAB U published ever? Trlday morulas: at SI 80 per year. 60 eta. for tlx montlu, to aim tot three month. ADVETHsrsa KAT33 (DAILY). One square pne day, l OC ; two days, SI 75 ; three days, f 60; four days, J 00; Are daya, H M; one week, 9400; ITJT?4 80 1 S3 60; one month. 10 00 ; two month, $17 00 ; three month. $M 00 -i uvuua, mv wi; rweive mostoa, aoo oo. xma ud3b ut Boua nonpareu type make one wraara. All IflflnaiMmftntl r9 -mmtlmmlm Palll Hop . o-Nloa. Society Meetings. Political Meet ngs, cwlll be charred regular advertising rates ,, Nolooa nndBT heed of -City Items" CO eenta pet Kae for first lnaertior, and 16 eenta per for No advorilaeraeatt Inserted to Local eolnan at AdTOrttsomenfc inserted onoe a week la Dally 5H? f"6? SI 00 per eon are for eaoh Insertion, very other day, three fourth of dally rate. Twlco a week, two tMrd of daiiv rite. -SfSPl3i?on fnlee they contain tmper- rLTfi "ifl?" not wanted and. ft aooepV ?Jia ?T?!T T, they will Invariably be r e Jeoted If the real name of toe author la withheld. An extra charge wQl be made for donble-ooluu or trtp'.e-ooiamn advertisements. Noticed of Marriage or Death. Tribute of Be pect. Resolution of Thanks, Ao, are charged for as ordinary ad vertlaementa, but only half ratea iwu mr imouy in umoa At taw rats 50 cents will pay for a simple announcement of Hvrioa or IWMD. Advertisement on which no ipeelfled nam bar z..Ji.v-lxua M raarxea will De continued "till ror b!d." at the option of the publisher, and charged wi? hi Hn uuo oi aisoonunnanoe. Ajnosement, A notion and Official adyerttaement ufur per square xor each Insertion. Advertisement to follow reading matter, or te ooc-avvur j special piaoe, will be charged extra w j tile position aemrea Advertisements kept nnder the head of "Hew Advertisements" will be charged fifty per ooni. Advertisements dlsoontlnned before the time contracted for ha expired, oharred tranalenl rtee xor time actually published. Pcy-ients for transient advertisement most be made In advanoe. Known parties, or Strang en with proper reference, may pay monthly or anar- ver.y, noooroing to oontraok AH aononn oem en t and reoommendatlo&a of candidates for osoe, whether m the shape of communications or otherwise, will be charged as a a verusements. Contract advertisers will not be allowed to ex ceed their space cr advertise any thing foreign te their regular business without extra charge ai Eemlltanoea must be made b Cheek. Draft. I roataJ Money Order. ltnm n in I Letter, o&iy suoh ramfttlnAM win t?t th I . ... .... I - " "VVL. Issues they desire to advertise In. Where no ls I b ue la named the, advertisement will be Inserted I !a the DaLy. Where an advertiser oontracta for I advertisers snoma tiwin mtuitw th, mi me paper to De sent to him during the time his I advertisement is in. the proprietor wiu only be I - - - m mv vmtrvm ms turn 1 uiwwm. m The Morning Star. Or WI1LIAM II. BKBRABD. WILMINGTON, N. C. Sunday Mobxibto, Jctmk 9, 1889. the favetteville centsni NI AIi, The committee of invitation for the proposed centennial celebration of the ratification of the constitution of the United States, to be held at Fayetteville on the 21st of next No vember, are in receipt of another let ter from lion. Jefferson Davis, in re ply to a second letter of invitation they wrote him, assuring them that he will be present on that occasion if no insurmountable obstacle come in the way. It is, therefore, reason ably certain now, if there was any doubt before, that he will be present, unless sickness or some unforeseen and unavoidable occurence prevent. We are glad to have the assurance that he will participate, by his pres ence at least, in the proceedings of that day, for his presence will lend additional interest to an event, which every North Carolinian ought to take a patriotic interest in. North Carolina is a historio State, the Cape Fear a historic see tion, h ayetteville a historio city this proposed celebration tne com memoration of a historio event. The men of a century ago were not lag gards in making history, the men of this generation should not be lag gards in proclaiming it, nor slug gards in preserving it. There is no people between the two oceans, nor between the two poles, who are more devoted to and justly proud of their own State or country than are the people of North Carolina, and yet, from some strange and unaccountable inconsistency they have stood modestly silent while others claimed the glory and wore the honors due to her. She has never received the credit that is hers for her resolute daring, the grand valor and heroic devotion of her sons who raised the standard of colonial in dependence and bore it to triumph at the end of that long, varying,dark and doubtful struggle; and even in the last great clash of pano plied hosts in which she bore such a gallant and conspicuous part, she has not been awarded the honor that is hers, nor the rank on the roll of fame that she is entitled to. She was al ways more intent on helping to win victories than in claiming her share of them when won, more intent on hurrying her sons to the front to breast the storms of battle than in writing epitaphs or building monu ments for th'e fallen brave. This has been her characteristic and is to day. It is a modesty that the stranger might mistake for indifference. Sen ator Vance once said in a speech in the Senate, referring to matters of this kind, "What North Carolina lacks is self -assertion," and he ut tered a volume of truth in that brief sentence. We must study more the methods of self-assertion, not to claim honors or glory unwon, but to preserve that which is won and wil be lost or appropriated by others if it is not claimed or guarded. Mecklenburg county inaugurated a new departure when, in 1876, she celebrated the centennial of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Inde- r pendence, which she has kept up from year to year since. Guilford county followed when she last year celebrated for the first time the cen tennial of the battle of Guilford Court House, which she followed up with a more imposing demonstration this year. Both of these, in Meek lenburg and Guilford have done much to awaken an interest in North Carolina's historic record, to res cue from musty and fragmentary chronicles, or oblivion, much valua ble historio information, and to stimulate a more assertive State pride among her sons and daughters; and Fayetteville will tjelebrate on the 21s of November the culminating event, the grand final, which makes com plete the glorious story which these previous celebrations oommemorated This will awaken additional interest in the written and traditional histo ry of the commonwealth, and again inspire the State pride that may slumber or need inspiration. We hope Mr. Davis will be there, as the living typical hero of one of the grandest of armed conflicts. We hope Senator Ransom will ba there, and in his best mood, to tell the BtO rv of North Carolina s struggle and , . , . . , H t ner iriumpns 10 ears man win near and not forget. We hope that the , ' , r , , TJOODle of the Cape Fear and from , her Queen City will be there in thou . - . - r . iinni. Rnn uBODla 1TUU1 IUH tar HSBIi x by the sea shore, from the highlands in the centre, and the mountains in the skyland, loyally and fraternally meeting to do honor to one of the grandest and noblest of mother States. STATE TOPICS. The Greensboro North State in forms us that Congressman Brower, from the 5th district is using his in fluence at Washington to have an ac curate geological survey made of the counties of Forsyth, Stokes, Surry, Guilford, Rockingham, Caswell,Per- son and Granville, in which exist val uable deposits of useful minerals and stones. Mr. Brower is a Republican of bushwhacking proclivities, to whioh he owes in some measure his success in two elections, but in this matter he shows a practical level head, for which he is to be com mended, lie has received, it is said, the promise of Major Powell, the Chief of the United States Geologi cal Bureau, to put a corps of scientific men in these counties during the summer. Of course Mr. Brower is working for, and more interested in his own district than in any other but if the survey could have a broad er sweep and take in Western North Carolina it would develop a wealth of mineral resources which would open the eyes of people and show how prodigal to the Old North State Nature has been in her mineral bounties. Let Mr. Brower proceed on this line. The good he may thus do may counterbalance the mischief of his naughty politics. The commissioners of Durham county evidently do not regard mar riage as a failure, and believe that no unnecessary barriers should exist to keep apart "two hearts that beat as one" after the front gate sociables and other customary preliminaries have been duly complied with. Believing that this requisite institution to the healthy growth and progress of com munities should be duly encouraged they and the board of justices at their last meeting resolved that there should be no county tax on marriage licenses, and thereby established their reputation as level-headed, pro gressive citizens. The towering question with which the tax list takers in this State are now wrestling is how to get a fair, square deal in the property given in for taxes. There is a good deal, of human nature in the average North Carolinian, when it comes to recording his worldly possessions for tax assess ment. With many there is a sud den shrinkage in property and values about this time that would entitle them to sympathy if there was sym pathy enough to go round. But this peculiarity is not confined to North Carolina. The citizen who is too modest to magnifiy his earthly goods in the presence of the tax lister is somewhat numerous and somewhat promiscuous in other States as well. If the citizen were relieved from this embarrassing ordeal, and the old sys tems still praoticed of "giving in taxes" abolished, and assessors ap pointed to go around and list the property, it might work better and put an end tothe harrowing perplex ties that worry the list takers. rnlNOK MENTION. What the survivors in the flooded district of Pennsylvania now dread is death from disease following the flood. The sickening odor arising from the decomposing bodies of human beings and animals is fearful while exposure and the lack of pro IK per food have already been produ c- tive of much sickness, especially amoner children. There is now con siderable diphtheria and typhoid fever, but the doctors, of whom there is a large number on the ground, are using every energy and precaution to prevent the spread of these, would be terrible if the horrors It of a plague were added to the horrors of the flood. The fence or rather "no fence question is one of the topics which is now agitating the sovereigns of Georgia. North Carolina wrestled with it some time ago, and it is a dis trading question in some counties yet. It cut short the career to glory of a number of aspiring young states men, but it is a big thing for all that There are fifteen or twenty counties perhaps in the State where the "no fence" law prevails, and where the fences could not be replaced by pop ular vote if a chromo were offered as a premium with each panel. The county commissioners of Meek lenburg county ,, have appropriated the sum of $1,000 towards the Pied mont exposition, which it is proposed to hold in Charlotte the coming fall That's characteristic of Mecklenburg. When there is anything on foot which has merit in , it she is, in the language of the Celtic gentleman "never backward in coming forward.' The promptness and generosity with which the people of different sections of the country, responded to the cry of distress from Johnstown, shows that the American people, however they may differ in matters of politics, of state, of religion or anything else, when it comes to a calamity where humanity pleads they all belong to the same family. CURRENT COMMENT. As an instance of the vaga ries for which the theory of high protection is responsible, the New York Evening JPost cites the case of the French butchers, who are not sat isfied with the tax of over a cent a pound imposed upon meat coming from Germany and Belgium, but who now ask for its inspection at the frontier, where the facilities are poor, the obvious purpose being to secure its spoiling by the delay. For this absurd demand the Chamber of Deputies voted "urgency" by 318 to 184. Another appeal comes from the laundresses of Paris against their competitors in the suburbs, who en joy the advantages of cheaper labor and rent and make competition in the absence of a protecti?o tax more dif ficult. This may be a narrow view, but it is logical enough. If protec tion against the foreigner is such a good thing, why is not protection against the native equally desirable? The butchers and laundresses apply the high tariff theory with a clear un derstanding of the basis on which it rests. Boston Post, Dem. Can the President afford it? It is not only a very questionable busi ness, but it may prove to be an ex tremely awkward and risky business for President Harrison to permit himself to be drawn into the Ma hone-Riddleberger fight in Virginia, even as arbitrator. There's no more propriety m his participation in that feud than in any other, big or little, in the Republican ranks in any of the States. He cannot possibly at tend to all the business of that kind that would be brought to him by squabbling politicians scrambling over the "spoils." And that is not what he is in the Presidential chair for at all. Phil. Ledatr, R- of the 3440 merchant vessels that passed through the Suez Canal last year 76 per cent, belonged to Great Britain, 5 per cent, to h ranee, 4f per cent, to Italy, 4J per cent, to Germany, 3 per cent, to the Dutch, and the percentage of the United States was next to nothing. There was a time, before the American merchant marine was protected off the high seas, when the trading ves sels of this country were familiar sights in every seaport in the world. Phil. Record. During the war Artemus Ward said he would give the last of his wife's relations to his country. General 'Harrison seems to thick tbereis a war going on now. N; Y, Com. Adv., Ind. JJem. Neatness In Girls. The Interior. Neatness is a good thing for a girl. and if she does not learn it when she is young, she never wili. It takes a great deal more neatness to make a girl look well than it does to make a boy look passable. Not because a a boy, to start with, is better looking than a girl, but his clothes are of a different sort, not so many oolors in them; and people don't expeot a boy to look so pretty as a girl. A girl that is not neatly dressed is called a I sloven and no one likes her. Her face may be pretty and her eyes bright, but if there is a spot of dirt on her cheek, and her. fingers' ends are black with ink, and her shoes are not laced or buttoned up, and her apron is dirty, and her collar is not buttoned, and her Bkirt is torn, she cannot be liked. I went into a little girl's room once, and all her olothes were on the floor, and her playthings too. - Learn to be neat, and when you have learned it, it will almost take care of itseii. A Clever Tnler. New York Bun. A boarder in a fashionable up town house, who had been delayed one night last week, arrived home as a seedy-looking individual came down the front steps with an aimful of spring overcoats. The boarder re cognized some of these as the proper ty of friends in the house, and stop ped the man. j "Where did you get those?" he de manded. ! A light smile flashed over the man's face as he replied "I'm a tailor around the corner. and the gentleman sent press and fix their coats." for me to The boarder suddenly remembered that his own coat needed repairing, so he gave it to the man, witn in structions to fix it with the others and return it. When he got down to the table he said to one of the boarders: "Jones, i met tne tailor witn your coat as I was coming in and I gave him mine, too." Jones looked up wonderingly. "What are you talking about?" he; asked. ! The boarder explained, and in i moment there was a panic. Severa of the coats were afterward recovered in a pawn-shop, but the thief is stil at large. The Editors Who Have Flams, j Chicago News. There is nothing in this wide world so trustful, so meek, and so conciliatory as is the able Republican newspaper which has peen pampered with official plums. The Indianapo lis Journalis a good newspaper. But its own John C. New and 'Lige Hal ford stand with the elect. Now day by day it is gazing at President Har rison and murmuring, half uncon sciously: "How great! How good!" Dear Indianapolis Journal, who dis covered America? ! "Please, sir, Benjamin Harrison.' He also wrote the Declaration of Independence, did he not ? "He did." It was he who fought the battle of New Orleans, was it not? "It was." Was it he or his grandfather who trounced the Injuns at Tippecanoe ? "He, sir." j Was it he who put down the rebel lion ? "It was." And reconstructed the South ? ! "Of course." i And licked Grover Cleveland? "Yes he and we." I Very good. Now you may jump down and run away. r- OUR STATEICONTEIIlPORA HIES. i Taxes are always with us . We have the school tax, the township tax, the county tax, the city tax, the State tax, and many times greater, all the United States tax. How great the United States tax is we do not realize. It foots up for the Union four hundred millions of dollars. Say there are 65,000,000 of people, and give five to a family, and we have 13,000,000 families. So the tax is over thirty dollars to each fam ily. Everybody knows that one-half the people, because of their email means, pay but little of this tax. The ordinary family averages, then, $5U a year united mates tax. Raleigh News-Observer. I North Carolina cannot afford to neglect the education of her children. Her honor, no less than the happiness and prosperity of her people, is involved. We have no lamp, by which oar feet are guided, but the lamp of experience, and the last few years have thrown a flood of light on the educational problem. General education is an impera tive demand wherever suffrage is general, and, in a State where suffrage is univer sal, education should be universal. Acw- bern Journal. j If the farmers are resolute and honestly stand by the Alliance, the jute trust is ruin ed and cotton mill owners will be greatly profited. Moreover, American cotton will reach the cotton mills in better condition and bring better prices. The country will be well pleased if farmers win in this con flict with speculation. Qoldsboro Argus, j JPOL,lTICAL,rOINT8. You are in the soup, just where your friends, the politicians, left you when they were done with you last November. You are in the soup, and there you will stay for four years, and there you will go .a;n i r ,uuoo luur years, unless in the meantime you learn the wisdom of exercising common sense. Six months ago you let these men lead you by the nose. You marched around shrieking for protec tion, proclaiming that you did not want British free trade which nobody had of fered you and assorting that a home mar ket was good enouch for you. Well, then you have your protection and are likely to have more of it you have no free trade-rand none too much trade of any kind and yon have your home market what there is of it. And, right and left, mills -and fac tories are shutting down on you, your wages are reduced, and business is bad all over, with no signs of bettering. Brattle boro Tariff Reform Record. j It is a most encouraging indica tion that educated and reflecting colored men are endeavoring to instil into the minds of southern negroes the duly of solely de pending upon themselves for recognition and advancement in the great battle of life. When this idea is fnllv prasced and .acted on by the dark-Bkinned population of the south, from that day will date their gradual release from those influences which now deprive them of the privileges conferred by the fundamental law of the land." Boston Iransertptt lnd. i President Harrison appears dis posed to adhere to his rule to make no re movals of Democratic officials (except for cause other than political) until the end of their terms of four years. This is what probably accounts for the slowness of the. changes in the Consular service. The newly appointed Consuls to Montreal and Dublin take the places of Democrats whose terms have expired. Phil. Record, Dem. The Philadelphia Zdger is needlessly distressing itself over the heavy taxes or tne sultan's country, auu up u State, county, city and tariff taxes of the TinlA rf ttiA TT : d . . rr uuiwu otaies, sou we nave some figures that are quite as interesting as anything in the Eastern Hemisphere. Mobile Register, Dem. He Wasn't Sordid, New York Sun. I had been sitting in the shade of a fence-corner for a quarter of an hour when a farmer came along with an ox team and invited me to ride with him. I was only fairly seated when he said: . "Sad thing happened back there there about six months aero." "Indeed?" "Yes; that 'ere blamed off ox shied at a paper in the road and run into a ditch and tipped the wagon over." "Yes." "Martha was along. Crushed the gizzard right out of her, and she was dead when I picked her up. Funeral cost me $40. I was just looking at the bill. Had a coffin with six silver plated handles. Ever lose your wife?'' "Never." "Awful sad thing. Haw there, Buck! She had two unmade diesses in the house, which were left on my hands. Guess I'll get shet of them, however guess I will. Whoa, you yeller ox! Undertaker said we could scrape along with four handles te the coffin, but I told him to make 'em an even half-dozen. Feller can't afford to be small about these things. Say, you know what belongs to manners, eh?" "I hope so." "Gruessed you did: even if you are afoot. I want to ask you how long a widower has to wait before taking another. There's no law, you know but a sort of custom. Is it a year?" "Some wait a year." "And some only wait three or six months?" "I've heard of a second marriage within a week or two." "Too soon a leetle too soon," he answered, as he J stroked his thin whiskers. ' Looks too sordid and grasping you see. Neighbors would probably talk, too. Couldn't complain about six months, could they?" "I should think not." "That's twenty-four weeks or 168 days, you see. Nothing sordid about that, eh? It's coming off next week." "Wnat! lour marriage? ' "That's it. Bin engaged five davs now, and it's to come off next "Wed nesday. Her name is Feebe. Awful hard to get up airly aud keep hustl ing all day. Had my eye on her ever since the day of the funeral, but you needn't mind telling it. Folks is gos sipy, you know, (iit up, you lazy beasts! Say. I want to ask about an other thing. "Well?" "Haven't got Martha any tomb stone yet. Have to git one.wont't I?" "Why, yes." "If I didn't they'd say I was sordid, woman t tney?" "They might." "Would you put a lamb or a dove on it r' "That's just as you feel ?" "Has it got to read : 'Martha the first and most beloyed wife of Aron Snyder?' " "Not necessarily?" "Kin I list put on : 'Erected to the memory of Martha Snyde, who died April 22, 1888?7 " "Why. yes." "And have it quietly taken up and set up, and not let on to the other. I see. Nothing sordid about Feebe, but sich things grind, you know. Do you take the cross road? Wall, good day. (xlad we met. Seemed to me six months was long enough,but I kinder wanted an outside opinyun. Had six handles, you remember ; but the neighbors might call me sordid and shut us out on quilting bees and corn huskings." TWIN KLIN OS. Boston worehips the busy B's BuDkerhill, baked beans, base ball and Ben Butler. According to the Allgemeine Militear Zeitung, No less than 150,000 young men in Alsace-Liorraine have since lo74 evaded military service. The average daily number of admissions to the Paris exposition greatly exceeds that of all previous world'd fairs held in Pans, London or Vienna. The annual Pans dog show is being Le'.d on the terrace of the Tuileries gardens. The exhibits show no falling off either in the race or fceauty of "ihe friend of man." There are 10,000 children in connection with the Norway Total Absti nence Society, and, with adults, a total membership of 72,000, of whom 8,000 are Good Templars. First Broker: Jinks is financial ly embarrassed, too. Wonder what's the matter with him ? Second Broker: Haven't you heard? First Broker: No; what is it? Second Broker: His wife buys all her goods at the bargain counters. Philadelphia In quirer. "Do you like the Greek poets?" asked Miss Theodosia Thuddiugton of Brown, who is not in the least literary. "Yes, better than any or the modern poets." "For what reason?" "Principally because they are. all dead. mercnant Traveler. Editha Corner: Papa, who do the newspapers mean by coal ring, salt ring and whiskey ring? Mr. Wheatly Corner: That is one formed to prevent rival enterprise. Editha: Is that it? Why that is just like an engagement ring! San Francisco Wasp. The Dentist's Daughter (who hears her father approaching) Oh, dear Edward, here comes my father. If he should find us together here, we are lost. Oh, he is coming ! You will either hare to ask for my hand or let him pull out a tooth for you. Fliegende Blatter. The vernacular press in Bengal appears to be steadily declining, apparently owing to the spread of English education among the reading classes. There, are now only two vernacular daily papers regu larly published in Calcutta, whereas a year or two ago there were five or six. Pharmacy is receiving the at tention of the Russian Government, and a plan is being prepared which will require that every chemist shall spend eight terms at a university, and will give a master in pharmacy an education and status equal to that of a doctor of medicine. An agricultural exchange says the best sugar beets are grown in sandy soil. We thought so: that accounts for the sand in the sugar, and here we have been un justly accusing the honest grocer. We take it all back, and wil. go right on paying thirteen cents a pound for bar sand without a murmur. Burdstle. A newspaper correspondent wants to see the women of America rise in their might and beauty and foreswear the Easter bonnet. The Easter bonnet is all right. That is worn to church. Something more to the purpose would be for the men of America to rise in their might and wrath and swear at the theatrical bonnet. P. S. Come to think about it, a great many of 'em do. Norristown Herald. 'Tinfld ad Vfrt.lBpmn t nr ntlerhnm T.tthi. Water In thia nnner - TTnortnollofl (nr Tina. pepsia and all diseases of kidney and blad- uer. jrrux? wiuua re&cu OX ail. T COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MARKET. STAR OFFICE, June 8. SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market quoted firm at 86 cents per gallon. Sales of receipts at quotations. ROSIN Market firm at 80 cents per bbl for Strained and 85 cents for Good Strained. ' TAR Market quoted firm at 1 50 per bbl. of 280 lbs., with sales at quota tions. CRUDE TURPENTINE Distillers quote the market firm at 1 90 for Vir gin and Yellow Dip and 1 00 for Hard. COTTON Market quiet. Quotations at the Produce Exchange were as follows: Ordinary. 7 cts $ tt Good Ordinary 9 " " Low Middling 10 1-16 ' " Middling .10 " " Good. Middling. . '..11 RECEIPTS. Cotton 00 bales SpiritsTurpentine 428 casks Rosin ...........1.278 bbla Tar 114 bbls Crude Turpentine 44 bbla DOMESTIC MAHKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning star. Financial. Nw Yobk, June 8. Evening Ster- ing exchange dull but steady. Money easy; offered at 2 per cent. Government securities dull and barely steady; four per cents 129; four and a half per cents 106i. State securities neglected ; North Carolina fours 126; sixes 97. Commercial. New Yobk, June 8. Evening. Cotton quiet but steady, with sales to-day of 433 bales; middling uplands 11 3-16c; middling Orleans 11 7-16c; net receipts at all U. 8. ports 1,212 bales; exports to Great Britain 3,824 bales; to the continent 118 bales; to France bales; stock at all United States ports to day 260,846 bales. ' Southern flour dull and unchanged. Wheat dull; No. 2 red 81823 in store; options active, closing iic higher; No. 2 red June 81c; July 82c;Augu8t 83c; Sep tember 83fc Corn spot llic higher and scarce; No. 2, 42c at elevator; options stronger; June and July 41fc; August 42c; September 423c. Uats firmer; options firm er but dull; June, July and August 28c; No. 2 on spot 28c. Hops firm. Coffee options closed dull and unchanged to 10 points down; July $16 ou; August $10 75; De cember $16 95; spot Rio dull; fair cargoes $18 63. Bugar raw strong and quiet; fair rennmg bgc, centrifugals, yo test, 7fc; re fined firm, with a good demand. Molasses quiet. Rice steady. Petroleum steady and quiet; crude m bbls at Parkers $7 10; re fined here $6 90. Cotton seed oil dull. Rosin steady. Spirits turpentine steady. Wool firm. Pork quiet. Beef dull; beef hams strong; tierced beef quiet. Cut meats firm; middles quiet. Lard weak and dull: western steam $7 00; city $6 45uoptions no sales; June $6 956 96JjiTy $7 02 7 03; refined quiet; continent $7 40. Freights to Liverpool market weak; cot ton 3 32d; grain 3d asked. Cotton Net receipts bales; gross receipts 26 bales; futures closed dull, with sales of 5,500 bales at the fol lowing quotations: June 10. 58 10 60c; July 10.6410.65c; August 10 6910.70c; September 1 0. 1 5 10 . 1 6c : October 9 89 9.90c; November 9.859.86c; December 9. 879. 88c; January 9 949 95c; February 10 0210.03c; March 10.1010.11c; April 10 1510.17c; May 10.2510 26c. Chicago, J une 8 Cash quotations were as follows: Flour steady and unchanged. Wheat No. 2 spring 79c: No. 2 red 79c. Corn No.2, 33i33c. Oats No. 2, 22 22ic. Mess pork $11 75. Lard $6 62. Short rib sides $5 855 90; shoulders $5 12i5 25; short clear sides $6 12 6 25. Whiskey $1 02. The leading futures ranged, as follows opening, highest and closing: Wheat No. 2 July 77 J, 77f, 76$ ; August 75. 75J, 741; September 75J, 75,75. Corn No. 2 July34. 341, 34 J: August 34J, 35, 34f . Oats No. 2 July 22, 22, 22$; Septemb r 22f, 22i, 22f. Mess pork per bbl Juiy $11 85, 11 85, 11 80; August $11 92J, 11 92 , 11 87f Lard, per 100 lbs July $6 721,6 72. 6 70; August $6 77. , 6 77i. 8hort rib Bide?, per 100 lbs July $5 92i, 5 95, 5 87 ; August $5 97, 5 97, 5 92. BALtiKORK, June 8. Flour fair job bing trade and firm; city mills and Rio bracd3 extra $4 8o5 00. W heat south ern arm Fultz oooo cents; Liongbcrry 8590 cents; western firm, closed quiet and easy: No. 2 winter red on 6pot 82J cents. Corn southern eteady; white 414dcts; yellow 4042 cents; western quiet and steady. St. Louis, June 8. Flour quiet. Wheat lc lower; No. 2 red cash 8081ic. Corn firm; No. 2 mixed cash and June 81c. Oats firm; No. a cash 26c. Whiskey $1 02. Provisions very quiet. 1 "W COTTON ITIAIlKT3. Bv Telegraph to the Morning: Star. June 8. Galveston, dull at lOfc net receipts 4 bales; Norfolk, steady at 11c net receipts bales; Baltimore, quiet and steady at life net receipts 400 oaies; Roatnn. nniet and firm at llitfalltc net receipts 93 bales; Philadelphia, firm at 11 jc net receipts 44 bales; Savannah, quiet at 10c net receipts 232 bales ; New Orleans, steady at lOJc net receipts 349 balesr Mo bile, dull at lOfC net receipts o uaiea; Memphis, quiet at 10 l-16c net receipts 26 bales; Augusta, quiet at lOfc net receipts 98 bales: Charleston, firm at I01c net re- ceiDtS bales. A Woman' Discovery "Another wonderful discovery has been made and that too by a lady in this coun tv. Disease fastened its clutches upon her and for seven years she withstood its se verest tests, but her vital organs were un dermined and death seemed imminent. For three months she coughed incessantly and could not BleeD 8he bought of us a bottle of Dr. Kings's New Discovery for Con- sumption, and was so mucu reiieveu 00 taking first dose that she slept all night and with one bottle has been miraculously cured. Her name is Mrs. Luther Lutz." Thus write W. C. Hamrick & Co., of 8helby, N. C. Get a free trial bottle a Robert R. Bklulmy's Wholesale and Ret tail Drug store. t BncKlen'i Arnica slv Tttte Rht Sat.vk in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chappea mnas, unuDiains, CornB, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It l ffnaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by kobbbt . cbixamy, wholesale and retail druggists. X ADVERTISE KN Merchant and Farmer PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT MARION,SO UTH CAR OLINA It has a lanre and increasing circulation in the heart of the Pee Dee country, the best Cotton section of the two States. It is a desirable medium 01 oommnnication with both the Merchants and Farmers of this section, and particularly with those of Marlon and Marlboro Counties. It la therefore the paper tor the Business Men of Wilmington. Proprietor. STAB Job Printing Office AND BOOK BINDERY Complete IN ALL ITS APPOINTMENTS EVERY VARIETY OF Printing, Ruling AND ZBnLc3-3is 19 tf - 3 ap COWQUSV1PTION. BRONCHITIS, SCROFULA, COUCH or COLD, THROAT AFFECTION, WASTING of FLESH, Or any Disease u-here the Throat and Lungs are Inflamed J Lark of Strength or Nerve Foiver, yon can be relieved and Cured by SCOTT'S EMULSION OF PURE COD L3VEROIL With Hypophosphites. Palatable as Miik. Ask for Scott's i:m,ihio,,rn,,fi t ho explanation, or solicitation i,,rc you to. accept a substitute. Sold by all Druggists SCOTT & BOWHE, Chemists, i.l. ebllO DAW ly tu v,c Jr 1, w GOLD MEDAL, PARIS. lj:i. W. BAKER & tO.'S Breakfast Cocoa la absolutely purr am: it is soluble. No CJiemicals are used in its preparation It v than threa timet the srrrn'h ! mixed -with Starch, Arruwr j t r and is therefore far nmre . a, CMting lest than one cent a ' i- . delicious, nourishing, strerrt.u!..: - . 61 LY DIGESTED, and admirably a 1 for invalids as well as persona i:. .....Li Sold by Grocers everywhere. BAKES & CO., Dorchester, Mas dec 23 D&W 9m we'.' r sn Swift's Specific has cured me of a malignant breakii)' out on ray loir, vh: h caused intolerable pnfn. It was calVi Eczema by the doctors four of win mi treated me with no relief. I candidly confess that I owe my present pood healt ii to 8. 8. 8., which in my estimation is Invaluable as a blood remedy. lis Julia DeWitt. 2227 K. lOtb. St., St. Louie, ilo. Our baby when two month? oid wa3 attacked with Scrofula, which for a Ion." time destroyed her eyesight emir, ly, aiiJ caused us to despair of her 1 i f-The. doctors failed to relieve her, find v .Swift's Specific, which pooii cut"! Inr entirely, and eho Is now hale and l.ciriy. K. V. Delk, Will's Point, Texas. f3FSend for book giving history of Blood Diseases and advice to MiUir.r-, mailed free This Swift Srn ind'".. Drawer 3, Ashmt.i. mar 20 ly arm ch sn we fr DRUNKENNESS Or the Liquor Habit. Positively Cured by adminiterin Dr. Haines' Golden Specific. It can be sriven in a cup of coffee or tea. or in ar ticles of food, writhout the knowledge of the patient ; It Is absolutely harmless, and will eneot a perma nent and sjpeedy cure, whether the. patient is a moderate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. IT NEVER FAILS. Over 100.000 drunkard liave been made temperate men who have taken i..M.-ii Specific in their coffee without their kDoiei(f!. and to-day believe they quit drinking of tneiroi free will. 4S page book of particulars fre "JNO. H. HAHDIN, Drufffflst, Wilmington, N. C Ian ?S DAW ly frrin we Ask Your Roiailer for the JAMES MEANS $4 SJIOE . JAMES MEANS $3 SHOE. According to lour Seeds. JAMES MKAWS 84 STTOE l.'L'ht and stvlish. It fits like a fstockinp, and REQUIKK4 JiO VKK.lVlNU t,"tx- ' ing perfectly easy the first tlnio it is worn. It will satisfy th mo-it . .iasriQiorjs. .iAjir;sitlr..i-' $3 SUOE is ai.is..!ut.-K t.'M y shoe of its price " ' ' ha3 ever bun i lao .l ex tensively on tU- wark'-s more out- spfiear- Atk. fbr the James Meaaa $2 Shoe for Boys - . ?l.uflfl- Full lines of the nbv -ho.' n1e J.gy H. LC.:BYANS,:WllrnlORtoii, C feblTDAWSm euwetr TYLER DESK GO. ST. LOUIS, MO., U.S.A. If.krrsor 400 Dllfrrfnt Stjlcsor FINE OFFICE DESKS BAJTK COUNTERS, HotrsE rrjKirrnjriE, TABLES, CHAIRS, &C tOO Page Illustrated Catalogue Free. Pottage "eta. hot 23 3m frfstt we - Bead! Read!! rpHB FOLLOWING VOLTJNTABY TRIBCTB to PANACEA WATER by that Christian Gentle man, the Rev- J. P. Barrett, D. D., editor in ohlef of the Christian Sun, is only confirmatory of Blmllar testimonials from other rellaP' sourceslon the eamo subject. Dr. Barrett says- PANACEA WATKB. There are so cjn7 "quack remedies" for dyspepsia, and Andrea diseases, that It Is hard to et people to believe that all remedies advertised are not quacKi and worthless. In anotner column will be lonnu the advertisement of the Panacea J ater, cy Mr. John A. Williams, of Oxford, N. C. W e have great confidence in Its value, especially m cast or dyspepsia. We have used.lt with Kat bene fit,and we know whereof :we speak, in a wee time its use made a decided! Improvement, u we have no hesitancy In commend'nff it to ' suffering. We also know that when Hurley, of Franklin. Va., had been reduced ai moat to a skeleton from a terrible case of u pepela of several years' standing, and wnen w medicine of first olaes physicians had ffj!.eat X care, or even give much relief,, he triea i water as well nigh the last hope, and to " astonishment to a fow days be found e1 lief. He oontlnued Its use for several weeKs he Is a well man. We write this notice i or y own accord, that we may persuade the suneru to try the PANACEA WATER. , , . c. For sale by J. H. HARDIN. Wilmington,- It your druggist does not koep It send f -w tlx gallons F. O. B. at Littleton, N . l,- JOHN A. WILLIAM!'. my 81 DW tf " oxford. N-t- f I a? J 1 1 I jLjl