Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Jan. 14, 1890, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. . -aafaat-.;-a rf-y'-afr.M: THE MORNING STAR, the oldest daily owt paper in . ort rt Carolina, a pu bushed daily excep Sl.mday. at $ 00 per year, $3 00 (or six month. $1 SO for three months, 50 cents fur one month, to mail wb- riber. Delivered to city nbacriben at the rate of l'i cents per week for any period from one week to one year THE WEEKLY STAR is published every Friday morning at $1 H per year, 00 cents for sis months, 30 cents for three months. ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One squ. .me day. ft 00 ; two day. SI 73 : three days, $X ! qua re tSO; four days. MOO: five days, S3 SO : one week. S4 00 ; two wreis, $6 50; three weeks, fti 30; one month, $10 00 ; two m.uithy $17 00 ; three months. $24 00 ; six months, $UO; twelve months, $60 00. Ten lines of tui Nonpareil type make one square. All announcements of Fairs, FestrrsJs, Balls, Hops. Picnic. Sx iety Meeting, Political Meetings, 4c, will be i hanfrd regular adverti-an rates. 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Contract advertisers will not be allowed to exceed their ipj. r or advertise anything foreign to their regu lar business without extra charge at transient rates. Kriaittances must be made by Check. Draft, Postal Money Order. Express or in Registered Letter. Only s;k h rc-nittances will be at the risk of the publisher. X.ivrrTisers should always specify the issue or issues thev desire to advertise in. where no issue is named the advertisement will be inserted in the Daily. Where an a Ivt-rtiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him d;in:i; ;he time his advertisement is in the proprietor w !! ifi!v Se responsible for the mailing of the paper to his address. !Thc Ttt anting Jtar. By UTLLIA.n II. BEB.MBD. WILMINGTON, N. C. ' I" r e t a v Morning, Jan .14, 1890. all in one, his comfort and solace when he can't do any better is that, notwithstanding th&patriotic service : it has rendered to be ignored, too, to be treated with silent cpntempt be cause there"are are no great moving armies to be fed? Does this New York bean breeder behold the beau ties, appreciate the excellence, the solid worth and far-reaching influence of the army bean, and ask for it, the protection to which it is so eminent ly entitled? We doubt it. Our opin ion is that the only bean he takes a scintilla of interest in is the aristo cratic bean which supplies the raw material for the Boston family dish, the Boston baked bean, of world wide renown, and that he is endeav oring under sneakiner pretence of taking a patriotic interest in the bean to take a selfish and cruel advantage of the Bostonian, if he is not inspired by deliberate, cold-blooded malice, in this scheming effort to cot off the Canadian source of supply, and com pel the Boston bean devotee to come to him as a supplicant aud plank down fifty cents a bushel more for the beans wherewith to make and enjoy his accustomed bake. Wait till the echoes reverberate from Boston. If she don't get up on her tip-toes, rise to the full altitude of the emergency.and declaim in thun derous tones her righteous indigna tion at this bold assault, this plunder inspired plot to corner the bean bus iness, the Bostonians of to-day are not the self-asserting descendants of the men who kicked against a little tea tax a century ago, but are simply tame, submissive, degenerate bean eaters to submit in silence to the tribute demanded by this New York bean boomer. If Boston would re tain the respect of mankind, she must be equal to the emergency, fill her stocking with sand, brace her self and smite this beatt tyrant a mighty blow. This is Boston's fight, and Boston's opportunity to immor talize herself again. Ing themselve- agairist it by daily doses of quinine. If they had to pay from $3.50 to $5 announce, for it as they did before the repeal of; the tariff duty-on it, instead hof 50jrlr 6Gt cents as they do now, they- woud have found the grip a somewhat more costly visitor. This is what makes the cheek of thoSe Philadel phia quinine makers standjout in, the colossal proportions which it does. But cheek is one of the endowments and distinguishing features of the average protectionist. CURRENT COMMENT. Protection for beans wa&the, cry before the "Ways and Meansr com-f muieo; yesterday.1 wnar. is; inemai-t of the family. The lady, realizing that; she wsf about to die, had pur chased a attmber of gifts and had theni sentjtd the house of & .friend oniWalhyiyHiils, with the admoai- .trial tneyj De den verea cm unnst- COMMERCIAL. 1VI I.MINf7'Off MARKET ter with outtinir mi,rht-have-teens I tionithattheyj and -used-tb-besonHhe -list, too ? masve? Each of the gifts-was Thes Republican party is a party of marked by the donor in her own splendid rofemories. Phil. Times, handwriting i STAR OFFICE. Jan. 18. Ind. The Democrats can safely say tor -the Republicans- wh.arMme.t EawaH'n.'TnpeyTTaFthe iRER60NAL. tire manasrement of the Astor estate, and receives for his services $25,000 a When Republican journals desire to hit Hon. John G. Carlisle hard they refer to him as a friend of the whis key trust, which they represent as a Kentucky institution, when the fact is that the trust has its headquarters in the good Republican State of Illi nois, in the city of Peoria, one of the greatest, if not the greatest whiskey distilling town in the United States; and the further fact has been; shown by a Congressional committee ap pointed to investigate the whiskey trust that Kentucky is one of the few States which engage in the dis- de Simiana, a staunch Royalist, once said to Lafayette : "The honest mass of your party have no superi- year, ors. Your elite is much better than Patti ha.s been on the stage ours, but our rank and file is as good snce tne year 1850, when, as a child of as yours, and your scoundrels are seven years, she appeared in New York worse than ours. New York Her- city. aldy Ind. Last year Kansas made 700,- 000 pounds of sugar. The produc tion this year was 1,294,000 pounds, and the bounty paid by the State was $25,880. "In the meantime," notes the Meridian News, "Kansas corn producers are using their crop for fuel, . It's a great scheme this, raising cheap corn and pork, to pay bounties to sugar producers. Mem pliis Commercial, Dem. This year ought not to pass without something being done to im prove our trade with Latin America. During: 1888 we boucrht 35 Der cent. tilling business to any extent where of what our southern neighbors had the business is not controlled by the to sell, and 'sold them less than 15 trust. The whiskey trust, like all the other trusts, is of Republican pa ternity, and belongs to the Republi can party. STATE TOPICS. MUfOR MENTION. PROTECTION ABSURDITIES. If there were anything needed to illustrate the absurdityof the protec tection idea, the ridiculous extremes tn which it can he carried and the seirih. rab-all character of the wholr business, it has been furnished in lare instalments from day to day m the hearings by the Ways and Means Committee on the tarirt ques t: :i I.at week, among others, the representatives of the farmers and other producers had their turn, and :!i- rirst to rush to the front and im plore protection was a New York be.tn man who besought this benign, patriotic, -infant" nursing Govern :n -r't ours to spread its protecting u.-;n ar uml and shield the imperilled bean from the onslaughts of the in v i !;n- pauper beans of Canada, Eu-ro(H- or any other part of foreign ter- r ; f rma W hether this demand for bean pro tection applies especially to anv par ticular member of the bean family, or in sufficiently comprehensive in its scope to embrace the whole con nection, we are left in harrassing doubt, but if it is not there is a dis courteous discrimination in favor of some pt bean which does cruel in justice to the other respectable mem ber! of that distinguished fraternity wno are entitled to as much conside ration, and whose services to the ountry are quite as much entitled to recognition. How about the castor bean, for instance Is it to be entirely ig nored, treated as a nonentity, and left to the tender mercies of the for eign pauper' Is it not a native product worthy of respect and pater nal i are ' Does it not lift its head proudly, in the full vigor of luxuriant fecundity and give us to understand Republicanism in Florida is show ing up handsomely. It has been charged and thoroughly established that U. S. Marshal Mizell wrote a letter to one of his deputies named Kirk, to "make out a list of fifty or sixty true Republicans from your county to serve as jurors." When this letter showing the base purpose to pack juries was produced and read in the Federal Court it was indig nantly denounced by Democrats and Republicans, but Judge Swayne treated it as a little informality, and didn't even mildly rebuke much less condemn it. This will probably lead to a resolution in the Senate by Flo rida's Senators, when Mr. Edmunds will have another opportunity to ap pear in the role of protector of cul prits and the sneaking intimator of another forgery when the criminat ing document is known to be true. There is war brewing in the Re publican camp of the 5th district of this State, which indicates a cat and a parrot time before the next politi cal campaign opens. There are, as there have been for some years, two factions in that district which hate each other as the devil is said to hate holy water. They are never more congenially occupied than when knifing each other, and the only time when they can be got to sit to gether in anything like apparent am ity, is when the fascinating scent of the spoils for the time being causes them to bury their resentment and pull together. But Brower is the little boss now, who is la dling out the soup and as he is giving it all to his own crowd and not a drop to the other fellows here is where the trouble comes in and where the racket be gins. The Winston Republican whose editor and friends have been merci lessly ignored and sat upon by Brow er, in a lengthy editorial last week raises the war cry, from which we take it there will be some fun in the future for those who stand off and look on and whose scalps are not in peril. O ne of the evidences of the indus trial interest in North Carolina, and also of industrial progress is shown in the numerous illustrated trade edi tions issued by the press in the dif ferent sections of the State, all of which tell well for the communities per cent, of what they purchased. For twenty years the balance of trade -with these nations has been greatly against the United States. It is time for us to institute a trade reform. Itfash. Star, Ind. ABOUT BABIES. Something "Wong When the Little One Cries. New York Smh. Sister Irene, who had charge of the New York infant asylum and who raises an average of a thousand foundlings every year, will not tole rate a bad baby. Something is wrong when a baby cries. The nurse is di rected to examine the clothing and if the nurse is not found a doctor is summoned. If on examination the little one is pronounced in good health and the howling still continues, the baby is sent to the reformatory, where he is put on his back in a crib like room and left alone until his temperimproves. It is only the new babies who cry, but the peace of the house is never sacrificed. Meal, bath and bed time are observed to the minute, and every child is trained to sleep all night long and a part of the day. Promiscuous feeding is not permitted at any time in the child's life, and before child culture comes the physical condition of the nurse in charge. Yon can't make Sister Irene or any of her assistants believe that strong coffee or tea is good material to nurse a child on. The result must be some form of nervous trouble. No child is allowed to eat solid ani mal food until he has twenty teeth, and then in almost infinitesimal por tions and but once a day. The child's food is never allowed to be cooled by blowing the breath upon it, as disease is too frequently com municated, it is thought, in this way. As all the children have to be disposed of in some way before the age of seven, a study is made of beauty in order to tempt foster parents. The hair of the girl babies is never cut, lashes and lids are care- Prince Bismarck ' received 600 telegrams of New Year congratulations from different parts of Germany and from foreign countries. The Duchess of Marlborough has taken $60,000 more from the Ham ersley estate in New York to support her ducal attachment. Prof. Huxley's son is visiting his cousin, Mrs. Frederick Whitride, of New York, and thinks some of starting a school for boys in -that city on the English plan. Charles H. Hackley a wealthy lumberman of Muskegon, Mich., hasH given that place a public library costing $115,000, and now adds $15,000 for a soldiers' monument. Hon. Roswell P. Flower, is the best entertainer in Washington this sea son. Mr. Flower are the padishah of hosts, His dinners is golden spots on the pages of congressional life. Joseph G. Ditman, the Phila delphia banker who mysteriously disap peared early in December, leaving not a trace behind, is now believed to have sailed for South Africa on a freight steamer. Renry R, Person, late chancel lor of the University of New York, who died in Albany New Year's day, was one of the famous 306 who stood out for the renomination of Gen. Grant in 1880. In 1884 he became a tariff reformer and voted for Cleveland. Joe Hoole, a performer with Lemon Brothers' Circus, tried to turn a double somersault in female costume in Kansas City three or four days ago. He missed, fell on his head, and so injured his spine that he died. George Vanderbilt, of New 8 SPIRITS TURPENTINE. Opened quiet'at 41 cerrtsr No sales reported.- ROSIN. Market firm at 95 cents per bbl.. for Strained and $i 00 for Good Strained. , ? i , TAR. Firm at $1 Stperbbl. of 280 m7rinrsalesat qTloTairajfTS:: .CRUDE TURPENTINE. Distillers : quote the market firm at 20 for Vir gin and Yellow Dip and $1 20 for Hard. COTTON. Firm, with sales at fb cents for Middling. Quotations at the Produce Exchange were Low Middling '. . 9 9-16ctsIblb. Middling 10 44 " Good Middling 10 " " RECEIPTS. Cotton 960 bales Spirits Turpentine 354 casks Rosin 1,336 Tar 168 Crude Turpentine 176 domestkTmarkets. bbls bbls bbls (ft5j5t-4di fMay nd 'June delivery S 1$3-fl4dT J die and 'July delivery .VS-A4H July and August delivery I M-SHotr, Tenders 4 0Q bales new and 100 old docket. " ' , Wheat firm; demand toor; holder Offer -sparingly.- Corn firm, demand poor; new mixed western 4s Sd. 2 P, M. A mcrican Good middliru' 5 5-16d; middling 5 18-10d: low mul. dlingSd; good ordinary 5,'d; ordinary Sates-trxlar tnHurirri 7fko hnl, American. 4 P. M. Futures closed steady January 5 48-04d, seller; January February 5 48-64d, seller; IVbruarn.) Mareh 5 48-64d. seller; March and April 5 50-64d, seller; April and May ft ftl-fUd. seller; Mav and June ft ft2-fl4d. buyrri June and July ft 53-64d. buyer; July and August ft 55-04d, seller; Aumt ft ftft-u, seller. NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS The rra.n f A I ' A M MICKOIIK Kllllku il mmt wondt r ful nwili, m, l-vniiv II ) nrvrt lailol ,i, any intatvr, no matin .1,,, lh diwaiu-, ln,m I I I k' 11 to thr aimplral fliar- It. , to thr human aytirni Thr arirnlifii m n .l i..li,( i laim and prmr 1 1. at . diarabr i CAUSED BY MICROBES, AND Wheat dull and York, is engaged to Miss Mary, young- firmer; No. 2 red 86c at elevator: on- i J 1 . r TITM1 Tl ' r I . ' lit est aaugnier 01 wiuiam jonnstone, ot uons aun on account ot lew dispatches 1 k By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Financial. New York, January 13. Evening. Sterling exchange dull but steady at 483 487. Money closed ranging from 4. 12 per cent.,with last loan at 6. Govern ment securities dull but steady; four per cents 126; four and a half per cents 104j." State securities entirely neg lected; North Carolina sixes 123; fours 90. Commercial. New York, January 13 Evening. cotton easier, witn sales ol alii bales; TI-.J.J If L T7ll s&aMaM Radam s Microbe Killer for export; middling uplands 10c; mid dling Orleans 10c; net receipts at all United States ports 26,083 bales; exports to Great Britain 2,623 bales; to France 1,272 bales; to the continent 15,502 bales; stock at all United States ports 680, 558 bales. Cotton Net receipts 1,174 bales; gross receipts 9,107 bales. Futures closed weak, with sales to-day of 153.900 bales at the following quotations: January 10.3610:37c; February 10.39c; March 10.46c; April 10.54c; May 10.5910.60; June 10.6410.65c; July 10.69 10.70c; August 10.7410.75c; September 10.32 iu.34c; October 10.06 10.08c. Southern flour dull. Exterminatr thr M rolx an titim ihrm t il,, yRtem, and when that ia dmr ' tnt..i In... ... achr or pnin. No maltrr what thr rliar aw 1 1,. . . aimplr raac of Malaria r rvrr t a -omtunai i.ti ..( .(.. eaara, wr urr thrm all at thr aamr iimr . a t : diaraara constitutionally Atlbma, Consumption, alarrh, II rhltl. It he ii mall am, Klilur) ami Llffr Dltflar, lillla and I'rlrr, malrTronblra, In all lla forma, anil, In farl, nrry Dlaraar knnun in ih II u tn a it N)lrm. Georgetown county, S. C. Miss John stone is one of the most beautiful wom en in the State, bright and highly ac complished. Vanderbilt is quiet and and worth $10,000,000. POLITICAL POINTS. the vast possibilities that are centred in it it" it had halt a chance? Does it not freely yield with gentle per suasion copious tributes of that lus cious laxative garnered within its cells, which is the delight of the chil dren and for which they cry ? Cas tor oil. that grand intestinal lubri cant whose magic power as a moving cause countless millions of juvenile; and adult humanity since its first" happy discovery attest. Are we to ignore our own proud, native castor bean and become dependent upon the despised alien ? What fatuity is at the bottom tf this ? What obtuse stupidity that fails to perceive the mighty possibilities and achieve ments locked up within the castor bean and would by cold indifference, or lack of comprehensive intelligence choke off what might become a grand and glorious industry of pro perly protected. And then there1 the army bean, that succulent esculent, that sturdy standby of the. gallent defender of his country on the kented field and on the toilsome march, that nourish er, that generous font of bean soup, food and drink and almost raiment When Senator Edmunds in his effort, which by a strict party vote proved successful, to prevent the in vestigation of the conduct of United States Attorney Chambers of Indiana, in the Dudley matter, insinuated that probably the "blocks-of-five" letter was a forgery, the following telegram from Indianapolis was sent to him: We will pav Col. Dudley $1,000 if he will come to I ndianapolis and swear that he is not the author of the letter which you suggested in he Senate to-day was a forgery. This offer has been open since Nov. 1. 1888. but has not been accepted. Indianapolis Sentinel. Senator Edmunds knew when he indirectly and meanly tried to make the impression that the letter was a forgery, as well as he knows that he is baldheaded, that it was not a for gery. He knew, what every other reader of newspapers in the United States knows, that Dudley has not dared to go into the New York courts, to which he had been repeatedly summoned, to prosecute the suits for libel which he instituted before the election against several papers in New York city for publishing that letter, and he knows, too, that on the day when Dudley was in Indianapolis under the shielding arm of the United States District Attorney, the Indiana polis Sentintl republished the letter and dated Dudley to sue it for libel. He knew this and this makes his espousal of Dudley's cause and his false representation the more shameful. fully trimmed, "han? mouths" arc for which they speak, and some of coaxed to grow together by means which show marvellous progress When a public man is followed into private life by the abuse of his enemies, you may know that he has a strong grip on popular favor. The tes timony of Mr. Cleveland's political ene mies is to the effect that he is the most popular man in America. Nashville American, Dem$. r With fre ool we should have more sheep, more woolen manufactures and cheaper goods, for free wool would be followed by reduced cost of produc tion, and that would lead inevitably to reduced duties on woolens. Free wool is directly in the interest of the people, for it means cheaper clothing for every body. New Yerk World, Dem. The Harrison Administration entered upon the new year with the de pressing effect of nearly 11 per cent, more business failures in 1889 over those of 1888, and an increase of nearly 17 per cent, in liabilities. Herein is most beau tifully illustrated the "protection" to business interests which the election of Harrison was to bring about. Syracuse Courier, Dem. The war is over with the excep- of a support for the chin, and noses tion of the war which the Republican . 1 I t"VO H-Ir 1 f .--! na-a -l-an . . . U. I 4. 1 A ' Years aeo such Daoers ocranallv rnat are inclined to turnup are .lllc -ai is frequent occurence, as to have ,os. d"totZ tt rL"" Li"?5. .4 J " J I uiuiw, ouu t-tLlllt: HUl IdOL LIlclL 1 L from the West; prices Hic up but steady; No. 2 red January 86c; Febru ary 87c; March 88c; May 89c. Corn dull and easier; No. 2, 38c at elevator; options generally steady but dull; Janu ary 38c; February 88c; March 88c; May 39c. Oats firmer and quiet; op tions quiet and HHC UP: January 29c; February 28C; March 28&c;May ac; no. a, spot aac; mixed Western 2730c. Hops firm. Coffee options opened 6teady and unchanged to 10 points up, and closed barely steady, 5 10 points up and dull; January $16 00; February $15 9016 00; March $16 00 16 10; May $16 0016 15; Rio on spot firm and quiet; fair cargoes 19c. Sugar raw steady and quiet; fair refining 54c; centrifugals 96 test 5 9-16c; refined firm and in fair demand; C55?3c; extra C 5i5.?c; white extra C 5 6,ic; off A 556c; mould A 6sc: stand ard A 6c; confectioners' A 6c; cut loaf 738'c; crushed 7c; powdered 6?c: granulated 6c; cubesc. Molasses foreign nominal; New Orleans quiet; open kettle, good to fancy. 3847c. Rice steady and quiet; domestic 46ic. Petroleum quiet and steady; crude in barrels,at Parker's $7 80; refined here $7 75. Cotton seed oil strong; crude 28c bid; yellow 34c bid. Rosin dull; strained common to good $1 201 22. Spirits tur pentine quiet at 4445c. Pork steady; old mess $9 7510 25; new mess $10 50 11 00; extra prime $9 259 75. Beef firm; extra mess $7 00; beef hams quiet at $12 2512 50; tierced beef dull. Cut meats weak; pickled bellies 585?8'c; do shoulders 4Jc; do hams 88c; middles quiet; short clear $5 30. Lard firmer and quiet; western steam $6 15; city steam $5 70; options January $0 12; Beware of Fraudulent Imitations f See that iir Tradr-Marl (aamr aa on r-arh jug Send (or hr given away by jan 11 DAW ly r I ai.fM a 'Miatory ( thr Miirol Kill't k K HI I I.AMV. lr"k'k', V ilminyl'Mi, N Kolr Al'tt.t nrm ao i u t h CAUTION 5 no ! ik)i IodbT1m' aama mni Drlraa aw a tawi ai rf m IKai bottom. If the d rUr raaniMTt tupply job. "d dlrwct to .factory, acloalaaT Mfariltad XMfcMMa u tHiinlv jH aaaaTafJawMfcaWaaafct jf their virtue for novelty. While they so as not to breathe in the nostrils tuafy has no time to pay any attention I,ebruary $ 21; May $6 40. Freights snow inai rne state is moving they l"c" cuarges, anu sucn irreguiari show also that the newspaper men of the State are keeping up in the march and are doing their full share in the grand woVk of progress. FIRE AT PLYM6UTH. Correspondence Morning Star. Plymouth, N. C, Jan. 10. A fire broke out about 2.30 p. m. to-day in this place, originating in a small shingle and grist mill on the upper part of Water street, which destroyed several buildings, a cotton gin owned by L. L. Newby and a large ware house, owned by me. The wind shifting down the street, fire ignited the roofs of many of the buildings used as stores, which, however, were all extinguished by the town engine. Sawdust caught about a quarter of a mile from where the fire originated, ties as snoring and thumb-sucking are corrected. 1 here is not a rocker either or a crib or chair in the whole asylum, and pillows are not thought healthful for' tender shoulders to round upon. COLORED MESSENGERS., How They Are Treated by the Bosses in Washing-ton. The Washington Advocate, a paper published in the interests of the col ored people, has been making some inquities concerning the treatment of messengers and laborers in that the Departments under the Harrison Administration. As a result of its investigations it publishes the fol lowing, which shows that the colored man who was a "brother" be fore the election is a servant and a menial since the election: to the pea-headed politicians of the Worth. New Or leans States. Dem. Shall Women be Allowed to Vote T The question of female suffrage has agitated the tongues and pens of reform ers for many years,, and good arguments have been adduced for and against it. Many of the softer sex could vote intel ligently, and many would vote as their husbands did, and give .no thought to the merits.p a political issue. They would all vote for Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, for they know it is a boon to their sex. It is unequaled for the cure of leucorrhea,' abnormal discharges, morning sickness, and the countless ills to which women are subject. It is the only remedy for woman's peculiar weak steady; cotton 14-64d; grain 5d. Chicago. January 13. Cash quota tions are as follows: Flour quiet and unchanged. Wheat No. 2 spring 76 ,c; No. 3 spring 6474c; No. 2 red 76 77c. Corn No. 2, 29c. Oats No. 2. 20c. Mess pork $9 50. Lard $5 77. Short rib sides $4 654 75c. Shoulders $4 12i4 25. Short clear $4 955 00. wniskey $1 02. The leading futures, ranged as follows: opening, highest and closing. Wheat No. 2 January 77,' 77, 77; February 78K. 78i; May 82, 82, 82. Corn No. 2 January 28, 29, 29; February 29. 29, 29. Oats No. 2 January 20,H. , 20; February 20, , 20i; May 22, 22, 22. Mess pork, per bbl January $9 50. , 9 50; February $9 50, W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE CENTLCMCN. " Calf. Hoar Laeml OraJa aarl OawaV moor Waterproof. Heat In th worlii. F.iamln hit 5.1)0 (JENI'I.NK HANI-fKUMi XII OK. 4.00 H ANI-MKWKI WFI.T hllOC.. 3.0 IOM K AMI MltMUlK' Ml OK. :a.80 KXTKA YAI.CK Al.t MOr. 3.25 92 lVOKKIMlMKN't Xllorft. .00 and 1.7(1 ItOVM M ll(H), MlOaUa. n mada la Conjrrea. Itatloa awl Ir. $3&$2SHOESufd. 1.7 gflOK POK MlftKJCA. Boat Material. !Ut My). Itaaat nttlaxA. W. L IaciM. Brocatoa. Ml jan 11 Sm H VOK I.I tllN aa la th THEECOIMOrVIIC, THE BEST LOW TIUCKD PAPER CUTTER - IN THE MARKET. nesses and. ailments, sold hv rlriKmkto 9 55,9 52; Mav $9 92W. 9 92U. 9 00 under a positive guarantee from the J Lard' P?r 100 fts January $5 77. 5 80, manutacturers that it will give satisfac- ? ou reoruary . 5 85; Mi tion in every ease, or money will be re funded. See guarantee on wrapper around bottle. f After a man has had the benefit of the protective tariff for some time, and got fat on it, it is hard to get him to let go, and if his hold does slip he is very apt to make an other grab. Some quinine makers in Philadelphia actually had the im pudence to go before the Ways and Means Committee in Washington last week and make a plea for the restoration of the duty on quinine, and at a time, too, when 100,000 of the denizens of the City of Brotherly Love, and other Northern burgs were tugging with the grip, and fortify- Whan a colored man. through the and below the depot recently built influence of a Congressman or Some tor tne Atlantic Coast Line, and was other, prominent person, secures a still Durning to-night, but it is care fully watched. R. B. Latham. HOW THEY LIKE IT. Wilmington Review. Our neighbor of the Star eomes to us to-day in a new dress and with a clean face. The type are all new and handsome and the press work causes them to show up very clearly and distinctly. The improvement is a marked one. Durham Sun. The Wilmington Star came out yesterday morning in an entire new dress of type, and presented a most Deautilul appearance. tion. Negroes do these things through fear of being dismissed from their positions. With the possible excep tion of of the White House, in which negroes are. boycotted altogether, there is not a department of the Go vernment in which auditors, secre taries, assistant secretaries, chiefs, commissioners and deputy commis- The Star is sioners do not use Government em- ably edited and is a great institution ployes (meaning colored employes) i. .M.mniguiu. nc wisn Drotner uwu Ttuvantage. cernara continued prosperity. , Charlotte News. The Wilmington Star comes to us to-day in a new and very attrac tive dress of type. All the old fea ture$:f!jU n4kt?'p are! stained and in its new type it is so' pretty that it almost hurts our eyes.' ' Ttaefr Business Booming. Probably no" one thing has caused' such a general ; revival of trade at Rob ert R. Bellamy's Wholesale and Retail position and is assigned to a division, J Drug Store at their giving away to their it is not manv davs he fnre hp ic -allH I customers of so many free trial bottles on to go to the house of the chief of Dr. King s New Discovery for Con that division to make fire in th sumPtlon- Their trade is simply enor VI '. e ?S, n mous in this very valuable artiele from iiiumiug, iu cut grass, spnnKie the the fact that it alwBys cures and never sidewalks, put down carpets, wait on disappoints. Coughs, Colds, Asthma, dinner parties, drive the family car- Bronchitis, Coup, and all throat and riage, and do scores of other things long diseases quickly cured. You can without a penny's extra comoensa- test it before buying by getting a trial uuiucucc, large size r,very DOttie warranted. ' f Fv Vil L nK-.. A tf CC V a. , rcuiudry $k Dd, , O 0; May $6 05, , 6 05. Short ribs, per 100 lbs January $4 50, 4 67. 4 67; Febru ary $4 67. 4 70; May $4 90. 4 90. Baltimore, Jan., 18. Flour steady. Wheat southern quiet and firm; Fultz 7282 cents; Longberry 7383 cents: western steadyr-Nor 2 winter red on spot and January 80 cents. Corn south ern quiet and firm; white 3130 cents; yellow 31 39 cents; western quiet. Read advertisement of Otterburn Lithia Water in this paper. Uneaualed ior uyspepsia and all diseases of kid ney and bladder. Price within reach of all. t CHICrWESTtR"3 ENGtiSH t-miLs 5 .""r" lnono BRAND. aim aiwaj reliable. L.adlea. vreo, iQfiaiiic Mxea. araled with blue, KiiWtoai Taka m tl..- hi kiii. I Id Daltr board Khicim nink .. T (Mamiill for Dartiaulara. taaliMMtUI. Chleheitcr Ckaai'l Ca Jladlaoa Sa.. Pklla F. sep27rAWlv ' ' VLr-4 B For Bottom Prices -- Ex-Presiddnt ; Cleveland and his wife will soon go to Florida for a few weeks. Touching Forethought. Cin. Inquirer. About six weeks ago the wife of a well-known West End physician died of cancer. On Christmas eve the dOOr-bell Of the house, ran cr anrl rn the door being opened a messenger. ' 0N '6ROCERrES XNI RovreiONsr come delivered a good-sized package. It orwritW was taken in, and when opened was ' woody acUrrie !: found to contain the Christmas pres- r . ent of the dead wife to the members tvua - r- COTfdN MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. January 13. Galveston, firm at 10c net reeeipts 5,954 bales; Norfolk, firm at 10tc net receipts 1.954' bales; Balti more, nominal at 10c net reeeipts bales; Boston, quiet at lQc net re ceipts 265 bales; Philadelphia, firm at 10c net reeipts 618 bales; Savannah, nrm at 10-ioc net receipts 3,671 nales; New Orleans, oiiiet at lOc-net reeeipts 8,096 bales; Mobile, firm, at 10c net reeeipts 1,642 bales; Memphis, firm at 9 15-1 6e net receipts 5,793 bales; Au gusta, quietndafirm at 10c net receipts 510 bales; Charleston,, firm at 10c net reeeipts 1,167 bales. ., Foreign mars efts. By Cable to the Mominr Stir. Liverpool, Tan, 13, noon Cotton, none offering but priced riot quotably easler. American middling 6- 18-16d Sales to-da 10.0QO bales; or-speculation.,, and export 1.000 bales: reretrvf o?' 1 , 15,000 bales, of which . JO.OOOwere Amerl-. van , j'Futares quiets-January deiivery and February deliver! fl AtuutTun ..7jui. fblTary and 'March delivery ,5 4-64d;J prii aeiivery 5 50-645 49-64d; Aprif and May delivery 5 52-64 Thi Marhine la 6r,tnd in mo lar drmaml .. Inntera who wanlalkaai l'af-f ( m.r, .t . A,y, Price. IT IS VERY MMI'I F IN t llNMhlTlhiN yet h POWKRFIJI.. STkON: .d .. l..., .. nJ,h;?-h.""pne, ( ,,,,rr r vrrY Mahinr arrat.i.l 9175.00. Boxed anrl ahinprd Irrf ol rharrc TV V C Mil f MAN "n 11 ,f Manalaiurrra, Wraiefly. U GOLD UKDAU PAJIIB. 1( W. BAKEIt & CO. H Breakfast Cocoa - aa ImMw mtrvi narl if ia oia.l.ta. .No Cliemicafs ara aaa4 la Ita anvaralkna tl la . tkaaa aVa 1 u raa aXfrt t ., ... nlsad arUk atarck. AnawnmH i car M I aSaiWin far mora annam. al AafrHaf laaf faaa aa mi a ra II k daltoloaw, anarlaalat. atrrwyUawili t '. RLT DiaaaTBD, aa4 a4mlraMr a-l v"' fbr laralU aa Wall a aataiaa In i. .,'ta SI4 hj Qrarara tftrjmtf r. W. BrR A CO, Borohester, W ai , deciPAWro 6, w.l,,. liyiiii-rj.'v aaaaaaiaaaaaa2 ft- al WfWilJ JTT. M Ik Altaataa. aUa. OtBOa 9LH Whl4bavU Hi. oct22DAWly I,.),., WO? il
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 14, 1890, edition 1
2
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