Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / April 9, 1890, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. THK MORNING STAR, the oldest daily news paper in North Carolina, is published daily except Monday, at $d 00 per year, $.1 00 for six months, $1 50 for three months, 30 cents for one month, to mail sub scribers. Delivered to city subscribers at the rate of 11 cents per week for any period from one wee' to one year. THK WEEKLY STAR is published every Friday raornin at $1 00 per year. 60 cents for six months. 30 cents tor three months. ADVERTISING KATES (DAILY). One square one dav. $! 00; two days, $1 75; three days, $'50; f.Mir davs. '! 00 ; live days, $3 50 ; one week, $4 00; two weeks, $o oO ; three weeks, $8 50; one month, 510 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $ii 00 ; six month, fWOO; twelve months, $60 00. Ten lines of .ihJ Nonpareil type make one square. AU announcements of Fairs, Festivals, Halls, Hops. Picnics, Society Meetings, Political Meetings, Ac, will be charged regular advertising rates. 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C-'Titract advertisers will not be allowed to exceed the r s;iace or advertise anything foreign to their regu lar b --mess without extra cnarge at transient rates. Remittances must be made bv Check, Draft. Postal I t.cv Vder. Exaress or in Registered Letter. Only -uc'i remittances u--. 11 be at tne n of the publisher. Ad . e: ':-es should always specify the issue or issues tiiev desire t advertise ;n. Where no issue is named the a !'. e-t-.semer.t will be inserted in the Daily. Where an adv.-tiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him dur-.nc tae time his advertisement is in the proprietor w.li or.lv be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his address. !hc Jttorniug Jtav. !I) WILLIAM SI. nEBXARD. WILMINGTON, N. C: Wkdnksday Morning, April 1, 1890 THE UNITED STATES SENATE. Sometime ago Senator Mitchell of Oregon, introduced a resolution in the Senate providing for the sub mission to a vote of the people of the States an amendment to the Constitution changing the manner of electing U. S. Senators, and provid ing that they be elected by the peo ple instead of by the Legislatures ot the respective States. A few days ago Mr. Henderson, member of the Judiciary Committee, introduced in the House a joint resolution of a similar character, which was recom mended by the Committee, all the members voting for it except two. These resolutions are an indication, to say the least, of how the Senate is coming to be regarded by a large portion of the American people. That as a legislative body exercising the functions for which it was origi nally organized and established it has lost caste with the people cannot be denied and that it is becoming a very serious question whether the manner of electing the Senators had not better be changed is also very apparent. In point of intelligence, with the exception of perhaps a half dozen members, the Senate does not rank above mediocrity, and it has become far more noted for the large bank accounts of a considerable number of its members than for its large brains. With the exception of Ingalls, who is bright, sparkling and snappy, but shallow, there is not a man on the Republican side who would attract attention in an ordinary deliberative assembly. Evarts may be" a great lawyer, but he is not a great Sena tor, and Edmunds who assumes the role of leader, more, perhaps, on 'ac count of his age than for his ability, in the better days of the Senate wouldn't rank more than a second or third rate man. He walks around, looks wise, strokes his beard and puts on an air of superiority, which with a good many people passes for supe riority and gives him a reputation to which he is not justly entitled. The intellect in the Chamber is on the Democratic side. Remove the ablest of these and the life and spir it would be taken out of the Senate and it wouid become as cold, slug gish and uninteresting as so many mud-turtles. But it is not a lack of brilliancy, nor even of ordinary ability which has caused it to lose caste among the people. It is the fact that dollars have become its distinguishing char acteristic and it has got to be a roost ing place for men without capaci ty, and sometimes without a surplus of character, who by the turn of for tune's wheel have become very rich and seek a seat in the Senate to grat ify a whim or an ambition, unless they are actuated by the mercenary motive to aid the corporations to which they belong by furthering their interests as Senators. It has come to be so now in most of the Northern and Western States that a poor man does not think of be coming a candidate for that position knowing too well that in nine cases out of ten he would be beaten by the man that shook the money bags. Hnr? the l.ircre nreDonderance of men of wealth from those sections. The people have very little influence in the selection-for they are not elec tions proper of Senators and con sequently take very little interest in them, and have very little confidence in them. They are regarded simply as money kings who have worked their way into the Senate by the map-ic influence of their wealth, and who have no interest in common with the people whom they profess to represent. The only section in which the poor man stands any chance of election is the South, and occasionally in the WW where the Democrats may be in the majority in a State has not become mighty enough in the South yet to elect the Senators, and for that reason the Southern Senators are superior as a body to the Senators from the money-bag States. The people realize the fact that while wealth controls Legislatures as it does they have nothing to expect from the Senate, and that the nnlv wav to make it what it was intended to -be, a body representing the States and the people, and not the mere millionaire delegates of capital and corpora tions, is to bring it closer to the peo pie, make it responsible to the people and let the people's voice decide who the Senators shall be. Then perhaps the Senate will again show more character and more capacity, if less money. But there is no prob ability of this resolution meeting with favorable consideration, for while it might pass the House, it would be strangled in the Senate, for the Senators would feel that in fa voring it a majority of them would be signing their own political death warrants, and they like Senatorial life too well to invite their own exe cution. MINOR MENTION. The Republican bosses in the House of Representatives are get- tine scared at some of their own pension schemes, and tried to dodge the Service Pension bill by suspend ing the rules and passing on the spur an amendment to the Senate uepenaent tension Diu, giving a pension of eight dollars a month to all dependent soldiers over sixty years of age, or to the widows and children of soldiers. After a short tussle this effort to dodge and pass a substitute bill involving thirty-five or forty millions of dollars annually was defeated. The Service bill, which they were trying to dodge, would add $750,000,000 to the pen sions according to their own esti mates, and this they concluded on reflection, and influenced, perhaps, by the protests of Senators Hawley and Hale, was going a little steeper than the people who pay the bills would stand. The cavalier manner in which they dispose of pen sion bills, however, is illustrated by the fact that they would rush through without debate or a chance for amendment a bill involving an ex penditure of $35,000,000, or $40,- 000,000 in addition to the present colossal pension appropriations. The tariff tinkers have a hard time adjusting the tariff so as to reconcile conflicting interests and placate the owners of the large and small indus tries whose money and votes are necessary to the sr. o. n. Under the new revised tariff a duty has been ' I" I put upon lime at the Solicitation of Congressman Dingley, of Maine, in the interest of some of rfis con stituents who are engaged in the business of lime burning. This was a swipe at Massachusetts and other portions of New England which had -been importing lime from Canada. n., .. . . I i ney don t like it, but neither do the wood choppers of Maine, who now demand a tariff duty on wood to compel the protected lime burners to buy their wood from them instead of importing it from Canada as they have been doing. What is bothering Mr. Dingley now is how to placate the wood choppers and avoid mak ing the lime burners mad by putting a tax on wood. The farmers in New Jersey don't seem to be much better off than the farmers in Kansas and other Western c wu- u c j States. Within the past few days lllt 3Ul-"u U1 j "as auiu two hundred farms to satisfy mort gages. New Jersey is a manufactur ing as well as an agricultural State, but that great "home market" which protection gives seems to be a myth there as well as in the far West, where the farmers are burning their corn, for which they have no market. In the meantime while the New Jer sey farms are being knocked off un der the sheriffs hammer to satisfy mortgages and the farmers of the West are burning corn for fuel, the protection champions are trying to humbug them by giving them pro tection on products the importations of which wouldn't amount to a drop in the bucket, and are improving the "home market" by putting a higher tax on many of the things the farmer has to buy. Senator Vance had the floor in the Senate Monday in the argument of the Montana contested Senatorships. He reviewed the evidence, showed by the facts that the Republican claimants had no right to the seats which they claimed, and illustrated by some pertinent anecdotes the ab surdity of some of the so-called ar- I mn.itt- rti-ido in tl-ifir lih.llf hv - - He did not hope by anything he might say to reverse the edict which had already practically gone forth to seat these men regardless of law, facts or justice, but he did bring the fraud out in such bold relief that only the blindest of the blind could fail to see it. Fraud is the order ot the dav now in Senate and House and it is perpetrated with such a su- preme indifference to the opinion ot honest people, and such boldness as to almost entitle it to admiration. The sneak thief is despised but, in the estimation of many, the highway man who goes out and holds up and robs a stage has some of the elements of the hero in him. STATE TOPICS. The Charlotte Chronicle says there is but little opposition in that city to the ininrr of S7.Y000 of citv bonds r u : v,c IUI L11C llllUlUVClUClll yjl Hit 5111.1,13. I . . . . In progressiveness and vim, consid- ering size and population, Charlotte will compare favorably with any city that we know of, North or South, and she is indebted for the position she now holds among Southern cities to the energy and push of her peo ple. This it is that by encouraging the building of railroads has made her a railroad centre, with all the advantages that this implies. The item of $75,000 will be a very small one in return for good streets, and it will be money well invested. Rockingham county is becoming excited over the proposed removal of the county seat from Wentworth to Reidsville. This subject has been more or less agitated at times for several years, but Wentworth being the more central point, and already having the court house and jail,' the idea did not meet with much favor except by people in the lower end of the county. Since the destruc tion of the jail by fire the subject is again mooted, ana Keidsville is bestiring herself with a vim that will put the Wentworth people on their mettle. CURRENT COMMENT. The McKinley tariff bill in creases the duty on iron ties three times more than it is now. This is supposed to be for the encourage ment of the Southern planters, especially the negro laborers, who are supposed to be Republicans. Memphis Commercial. The best evidence that the world progresses in liberality is the praise and encouragement which widely separated religious bodies now extend to one another. it means, not gush, but real apprecia tion of the ends of all religion. JVashington Star, Ind. Instead of wasting his time in writing shoo-fly anti-trust bills in Washington, Mr. Sherman should go back to Ohio and help Mr. Hayes w,t,n tne PouAtry- ow mat tnere is ., .1 1. T ' I i lij lit-! n Ltiiii iiii cwwa. ivii. iidvr hn5;nP wil he oreat.lv inrreaced Louisville Courier- J our nal, Dem. The Republicans are after the scalps of the Prohibitionists in Iowa, and are flaunting the fact to the breeze. When another campaign comes on the Prohibitionists will unsheath their dirk-knives and go after the Republicans, iust bv wav of keeping even, and then it will be . interesting to the Democrats. Chicago Mail, Ind. IRELAND'S HERO. Parnell is Coming to This Country to Lec- m ture. Pittsbvrg Post. It is newly rumored that Charles Stewart Parnell will soon come to America for dollars. He will get them, it is said, by lecturing. Some of the descriptions of Parnell are re- markable for inaccuracy. Scarcely one agrees witn anotner on tne rne:uP.and presentability of the msh leader, and yet there is nothing remarkable about him. He is tal? Mcuucr duu courteous, ana nas tne air oi connrmea ni-neaitn. wis cheeks are pallid, his neck thin and f r 1 , ... t-t. I mo onuuiucis uuweu. in man- ner he is absolutely and indubit- ably the most imperturbable man in tne UritlSn Parliament and I , w when it is remembered that ne is the target night and day for an endless amount of abuse and assailment his composure is all the more wonderful. His popularity is not only with the people, but with the great men of England as well. No matter how bitter the denounce ment of the Irish leader may be by the conservatives, there is always a deep and wholesome sentiment of admiration for the uncrowned King of Ireland. All the talk about the great sum of money which he re ceives is absurd. If he had an in come of $10,000,000 a year it would not be conducive to his comtort in the slightest degree, for his diet is rpctnrtp-d to the commonest ioou. He does not care for fine clothes and his life is passed constantly in study and work. WOMEN AND MEN. The Kind of a Man a "Woman Likes. Women, says the Ladies' Home Journal, like 'manly, not lady-like men. They like honesty and purpose of consideration. They like men who believe in women. They like their opinions to be thought of some value. They like a man who can be strong as a lion when trouble comes, and yet, if one is nervous and tired, can button up a shoe, and do it with an amount of consideration that is a mental and a physical bracer-up. They like a man who can take hold of the baby, convince it of his power, and get it to sleep after they have been worry ng with it with it, and w:ilkinp" with it. until their eves are tired and thev feei as ,f they had no brains. They like a man who is interested in their new dresses, wno can give an opinion on the fit, and who is nrooerlv indisrnant at any article l i o written against women. They like a man who knows their innocent weaknesses and caters to them; who will bring home a box of candy, the last new magazine, or the latest puzzle sold on the street, that will do more than its duty in enter- taining everybody for the whole evening They like a man who is the master , . - . 1 1 of the situation that is, who has brain enough to help a woman to de- cide what is the best thing to do un- der the circumstances, and who has wit enough to realize, when one of the fairer sex is slightly stubborn, that persuasion is more powerful than all the arguments in the world. They like a man who likes them who doesn't scorn their opinions who believes in their good taste, who has confidence in their truth, and who, best of all, knows that the love promised is given him. 1 hat s the sort ot a man a woman likes, and her every sigh of satisfac tion, as his virtues are mentioned, is a little prayer that says: "God bless him." ORIENTAL JEWELRY. llow the Asiatic Artist Imparts Peculiar Beauty to Gems. 7 he Spectator. The Asiatic who carved in jade and sunk deep inscriptions on the sapphire could have facetted pre cious stones just as well as the cut ters of Amsterdam, who. till lately, used no machinery, but he did not want to do it. He wanted subdued effects, and made of the garnet a car buncle, which is a miracle of color without glare, or he cut off, as in many emeralds we have seen, a mere corner, so that the beholder, instead of being bothered with flashing green in his eyes, should peep at will into great depths. We do not say he was altogether right as regards the dia mond he was altogether wrong but , fe . , i & i we may rely on it he knew his business, and when he failed in- tended to fail. His intense appre- tion, cures wind colic, and carries the ciation of turquoise was due not only infant safely through the teething peri to admiration for its color which, od. It performs precisely what it pro- after all, can be matched only by one or two flowers but to its being the one gem that, for all its brillian cy of color, does not flash. To this hour the high-class Asiatic loves the cat's-eye as the European can never do, because the light in it gives no pain, but reveals itself through a sort of dusky shade. The European has made lovely jewels, and will make lovelier, but he will never make the same jewel as the Asiatic, who, with inimitable art, will take from eold all its slitter without diminish ,J J lng by one iota the perfection of its shade of color, and will hand you a bit of enamel in which the green is as bright as the emerald the red .iq fiery as the ruby, and the whole as . ' I resttui to the eye as a piece of turf A WHISTLING WOMAN. The Tremendous Success Mrs. Shaw Has Had m London. New York World. English society has taken up Mrs. Shaw, the well-known New York whistler, who barely succeeded in making her expenses in and about this city. She has rented the Prin cess Hall in London for a series of entertainments, and with the assist ance of instrumental and vocal solo ists, has a very delightful pro gramme. Acting on the suggestion of a shrewd countryman, Mrs. Shaw put herself in the highest market, charged a guinea admission and made herself tremendously swell by naving the performance begin at 9 o'clock. The plan worked like a charm. Every seat in the house was sold the first night and they nave kept nzht on selling- to rn t - vated people. To the staid English women there is something "slightly . . . " . lmoroDer aoout a whist, ino- wnmn She is, of course, an Americanism and necessarily something of a sen- satmn tn rKiVn A. r i - . - . v-, iuta suuic KJL Iter present and surprising success may be due. At all events, the hand some whistler is basking in the sun shine of yellow gold guineas, with now a soprano, then a silvery tenor and alternately a flute, piano, violin and orchestral accompaniment. Habitues of Saratoga and Long Branch. Coney Island and the White Mountains will recall the difficulty this now prosperous mocking-bird had to fill a parlor at fifty cents ad mission. At the London Polytechnic Stanley" charged a guinea a ticket and with the patronage of the Duke and Duchess of Fife did not begin to do doing. the business Mrs. Shaw is PERSONAL. Patti says that every note of Wao-ner means snmethinp-. Every note of Patti means to her about $150. O'Donovan Rossa s twenty years of banishment from Ireland will expire next year, and he will then make a visit to nis native iana. Ex-Gov. Swineford, of Alaska, will start a daily paper at West Superior. He predicts that in ten years that city will have 100.00U inhabitants Tohn Bargar, of Hope, Ind., re ceived notification of the allowance of back pension to the amount of $1,700 He was so overcome with the good news that he died almost immediately of heart disease Thomas Seymour Denton has invented the word "manuprint, verb, adjective, and noun, for work done with a typewriter. It is at once more accu rate and suggestive than "manuscript" for such work Emperor William, of Germany, is a very hearty eater. He gets away with four meals a day m royal style. He and saiads for luncheon, soups, fish and roasts for dinner, and hot sausages and beer for supper. He has grown very uebiiy ui The richest professional mendi cant in the country is "Blind Johnny, of Philadelphia. He is 60 years of age and is worth about $20,000. He travels from Chicago to Washington, from there to Baltimore, and ends up in Philadel phia, spending about three months in each citV- He has made all his money J as a mendicant POLITICAL POINTS. With a tariff tax on eggs, the American rooster will crow half an hour earlier than usual, thus giving the hon- est farmer moie time for his day's work, Loitisoille Courier-four nal Dem. Senator Quay is suspected of knowing a great deal about the means used to put Benjamin Harrison into the White Honse. His hook is firmly fixed in the Presidential nose. Little Rock Gazette, Dem. i ne provisions ot the new Tariff bill proposing a bounty of $2,000 a ton on raw silk will have a tendency to rejuvenate the cocoon hatcheries of California and give the heathen Chinee on the Coast some excuse for remaining. Omaha Bee, Dem. This seems to be another "off year, and Democrats seem to be sweep ing things in the great cities ot Chicago and Milwaukee. If things go on at this rate, the Democrats will make up some fine morning and ihnd themselves in possession, not only of Iowa, but of Illinois and Wisconsin; besides there are indications that Minnesota is shaky. If Illinois should fall in with the Demo crats, what will all the new States profit the C. O. r? Lousville Times, Dem. Xlie Florence IMglittiijrale of tlie Nur sery. The following is an extract from a let- tier written to the German Reformed Messenger, at Chambersburgh, "Penn sylvania: A BENEFACTRESS. Just open the door for her, and Mrs. Winslow will prove the American Flor ence Nightingale of the Nursery. Of this we are sure, that we will teach our 'Susy" to say, "A blessing on Mrs. Winslow" for helping her to survive and escape the griping, colicking, and teeth- ti 1 cJv'd t td ' , W -,STH" ING SYRUP relieves the child from in and cures d sentc ond diarrhcea. Tt softens the mims. reduces inflamnYa- tesses to pertorm, every part ot it nothing less. We have never seen Mrs. Winslow know her only through the preparation of her "'Soothing Syrup for Children leething. If we had the power we would make her, os she is, a physical saviour to the infant race. Sold by all druggists, 2d cents a bottle. f The First Step. Perhaps you are run down, can't eat, can't sleep, can't think, can't do any thing to your satisfaction, and you won der what ails you. You should heed the warning, you are taking the first step in to Nervous Prostration. You need a Nerve Tonic and in Electric Bitters you will Ond the exact remedy for restoring vour nervous system to its normal, healthy condition. Surprising results tA Aur tha iica rr t-nte nrfoor ivi r tc l nnir1 and Alterative. Your appetite returns, 1U11U W Ullt JX. LlllO A. V-1. V V- JL W 1 1 good digestion is restored, and the Liv er and Kidneys resume healthy action. Try a bottle. Price 50 cents at Robert K. Bellamy s Wholesale and Retail Dru Store. Read advertisement ot Otterburn Lithia Water in this paper. Unequaled for Dyspepsia and all diseases of kid ney and bladder. .Price within reach of all. FLOUR, BACON, MOLASSES' 1 500 BBLS- FLOUR ALL GRADES, JQQ Hhds. and Bbls. P. R. MOLASSES QQ Bbls. New Orleans MOLASSES, 2QQ Cases LARD, 5Q Bbls. CAROLINA RICE, J5 Bbls. SUGAR, jQQ Sacks COFFEE, Kegs NAILS, 50 Bbls- DISTILLERS' GLUE, 200 Boxes TOBACCO, 100 cses LYE' y5 Cases BALL POTASH, 50 Cases STARCH, Snuff, Candles, Soap, Wrapping Paper, Twine, &c For sale low bv mar20tf WILLIAMS. RANKIN & CO COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MARKET STAR OFFICE. April 8. SPIRITS TURPENTINE. Firm at 37 cents per gallon bid, with sales later at 31 cents. ROSIN. Market firm at 81 lr I1" hhl for drained and $1 20 for Good Strained. Sales of better grades reported at $1 45 for I, $1 70 for K, $2 30 for M. $2 45 for N, $2 GO for W G and $2 75 for w W. TAR. Firm at $1 45 per bbl. of 280 lbs., with sales at quotations. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Distillers quote the market firm at $2 20 for Vir gin and Yellow Dip and $1 20 for Hard. COTTON Quiet and steady at lOJ rents for Middling. Quotations at the Produce Exchange were tw Middling 10 cents 1fl lb. Middling Vz Good Middling: HVk pf a MITTS Prime XUGhA cents nolind: Extra Prime 49iW cents; tr i ' - Fancy 5i5) cents. RECEIPTS. Cotton Spirits Turpentine. Rosin Tar Crude Turpentine. 14 bales 00 casks 1,221 bbls 470 4 bbls bbls DOMESTIC MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Financial. New York, April 8. Evening. Sterling exchange quiet but firm at 486488. Money easy at y2 per cent. Government securities dull but steady; four per cents 122; four and a half per cents 103J. State securities dull but firm; North Carolina sixes 123; fours t)G. Commercial. New York. April 8 Evening. - Cotton dull; sales of bales; mid dling uplands HJc; middling Or leans lc; net receipts 4,034 bales; exports to Oreat Britain bales; to France bales; to the continent 2,092 bales; stock at all United States ports 528,301 baleST Cotton Net receipts 1,437 bales; gross receipts 0,2 a bales. rutures closed steady; sales of 38,100 bales at the fol lowing quotations: April 11.49ll..r)0c; May 11.52 11. 53c; June 1 1. 54 1 1.55c; July ll.57ll.58c; August 11.5G1 1.57c; "September 10.9810.99c; October 10.59 10.G0c; November 10.4010.41c; l)c- cember 10.3910.40c; January 10.41c; February 10.4510.47c. Southern flour firm. Wheat stronger and irregular; No. 2 red 88;894c at elevator; options active, closing steady; No. 2 red April and May 88;J4c; June 883c. Corn firm and moderately active; No.2, 384384 at elevator; options dull but firmer; April 38Jc; May 38; July 395gC. Oats fairly active and stronger; options fairly active and firmer; April 29c; May 28;-8cc; June28c; No.2 spot 29fo30wc. Hops weak and quiet; State 1318c. Coffee options closed steady and unchanged to 10 points down; May $17 5017 GO; June $17 35; July $17 2017 2d; Kio on spot quiet and steady; fair cargoes 203c Sugar raw steady; fair refining 4 13-16c; centrifugals 96test5c, refined quiet; C 4,G8'478c, off A 5 7-lG558c; mould A 0 3-lGc; confectioners A 5kc, cut loaf 7c; pow dered 6j.c. Molasses foreign dull; 50 test, 21c; New Orleans steady; common to fancy 314 c. Kice firm, with a good demand. Petroleum easier; refined $7 10. Cotton seed oil strong. Rosin steady; strained common to good $1 251 30. Spirits turpentine firm at 43c for spot, and 4141c to arrive. Pork quiet and hrm. licet firm; beet hams strong; tierced beef dull. Cut meats stronir; shoulders 5Jc; middles firm. Lard quiet and steady; Western steam $0 50; city $G 00; April and May $6 49; June $0 54; July SO 60. Freights easy; cotton per steamer !)-04d; grain 2i4,d. Chicago, April 8. Cash quotations are as follows: Flour firm with an ad vance of ten cents asked by dealers on some brands. Wheat No. 2snrintrand No. 2 red 8080Kc Corn No. 2. 30 K 30c Oats No. 2, 222258c. Mess pork $10 G010 G2. Lard $G 12) G 15. Short rib sides 5 11 H (if A 20. Shoulders, $4 - 504 GO. Short clear sides, $.5 505 GO. Whiskey $1 02. Ihe leading futures ranged as follows opening, highest and closing. Wheat No. 2, April 80, 80, 80K; May 805i, $1, 81; June 80, 81, 81. Corn- No. 2 April 30, 30i, 30 i; May 30 7, 31. 31; July 32L, 32. 32. Oats No. 2 May 22, 22,22, une 22.22. 22; July 22. 23, 23. Mess pork per bbl May 10 65, 10 75, 10 65; June $10 75. 10 82, 10 75; July $10 85, 10 95. 10 85. Lard per 100 lbs May 6 15. G 11H; Tune $6 22, 6 22, 6 22; July $6 27,0 30,0 30. Short ribs, per 100 lbs May $5 17, 5 20. 5 20; June $5 25,5 25, 5 25; July $5 30, 5 32U, 5 32. COTTON MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. April 8. Galveston, steadv at 10 15-10c net receipts 1,235 bales; Norfolk, firm at 11c net receipts 30 bales; Balti- more, nominal at llillc net re ceipts bales; Boston quiet at 11 c net receipts 8 bales; Philadelphia, quiet at 11 11-lGc net receipts 77 bales; Savannah, qniet at 10 15-10c net re ceipts 109 bales; New Orleans, very firm at 11c net receipts 810 bales; Mobile, dull at 10c net receipts 28 bales; Memphis, quiet and firm at 11c net re ceipts 147 bales; Augusta, qufct and hrm at lie net receipts 121 bales: Charleston, steady at 10 c net re- ceipts 50 bales. W hat's the Une of Talking ? There is no denying that SOZO DONT is the best preparation for the mouth and teeth. Preparations, like snow- flakes in number, have appeared, bui the public faith is still strong in the virtues of SOZODONT. Its use grows yearly, t STOP AT ST. JAMES HOTEL. EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN PLAN, Goldsboro. N. C. Elecant nrrnmmodations fT Ladies. Finest Hotel in the city. Specialties: Chicatro St pa It Ouail on Toast. Lynn Haven Bay Oysters, &c. mar 14 tt tJJM UNOSON BROS., I'roprictors. Hardware. rpiNWARE, CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE at prices that defy competition. WM. E. SPRINGER & CO., Importers and Jobber, oct27-tf Purcell Building Scratched 28 Years. lody covered with aralt-a. 1 1 . I ,,u terrible. ,Niinrliitf rudlr. r, . lief. Dorlorn and mnllilnm la Npcedlly cured hy iill nra m n of 5. Cured by Cuticura. If I hail known nl tlir Ciin i Nrmi.it ., , riKht yrar K, It wouM liavr uinl rr.r m tin hundred dollar) and an nnmrnw am.-uiii ..I .i,d, . My di hv (iitiai ( onitiirni . .1 i,n n, I,. pot not lar. r than a km It .r.I r,.M,l, ,, my body and Kot undrr my nail It,. ma).- ,. drop off of mt all thr tim-. and my tult, ,,,,k , Lea and without rrlirf ( t)r thousand ,1 not tempt mr to havr thi diaraar ,, at , , ( ' poor man, but Irrl r h to lw r licwl - , ,, , the doctors aaid wa lrprov. n.m. ,u , riaJii, etc. I took., and. .m..,,,.,. year and a half, but no un , , . , , doctor, aud no urr, I ( a nr. ( , x , , ( " Kimioim tin mu(h I h-i ,., ., , clear and free from a ale a 1 " ! " ' them were three boxe of ( ' ' Ot CfTH fICA RM. P'.T, ai! v. .... , '" Soap. If you had Ix-en Inn ai' , . ' cured me for f'JKMKI. you wou.i! I ... , ( 1 ' I looked like t he pi lure m y.,, ,. , ,,, . '' tnre number two, "How tot ur ,, , ' now I am a clrar at any j r.,fl , , . v , j 1 force of habit I ruli rny hand ov. r rn .,.. ., ' to scratch imi e in a w ho , l.ul t . n j . . . . all well. I rati Ik d t r nt -. ik hi , , !,,.., . be a kind of womil t.atiit.. i. ,, ' thousand time HKNNh In M si . ,., ,, M CUTICURA RESOLVENT, The new IHiKKland Skm I'urif 'r. of Humor Krmfdtr. iritr ma I : , great Skin Cure, and (in - i- Skin Hcautifirr, etrrn;!l . . .1 I ' I ( cure every pe ir of Hi lnm I-u-m pimply, crofulou. and h r dii... , of the skin, alt and l.l .l. v ,U pimple to rofula Sold every where I'm ' ( :&x .; Kn.vrT, Jl I nput' I)m . ami C I f H Ml' a i ( .. I . -I n 1 I Iff Senil for "How to ( nr. PKC, .V) illutration, 1H tf tm...i M Ul l.r., lilac k ti' an. liap-. 1 1111 vented by Li 7i i i a Mho. Jk Free from RhcumatiMn A 111 o no ml imi I tin ml. or . 7 V lit l ruin llnl r main, viaii., li.j.. I .. ruucular pain ami uuiiimo li. i pain-killing l.Iavl. r - ap 1 1)4 W tf . NOTHING SUCCEEDS I. IKK SUCCKSS I h. LA Ml( K l I Ml' 1 ' 1 nd U ' .ttf-' il h i t, kl! I I I Ml lfi-l.it ' f , M" ';.'', t ht l,w aw . ff.M. I I I i T h ;itt pi 1 r!iM , 1 " t h ll itMtHtt t n m, I fir r i fit ifn fi. fp ' Imiim n ml pi diwaif i CAUSED BY MICROBES, Radam's Microbe Killer Extrrminatr tlir Mn r..l ann cu ystrm, anil when that i il.n t ac hr or jain. Nn matt r ti.-it i h vmplr c air f Mal.it la I i ' .- ease. Hf ( urr t hrm all al (lit u" diwawi. ront it ut K-nall v. Aallimn, 4 o n n m l l n , m.n i ii. tl. lilll, It!iciiiiinllii, KK'ii't mxi 1,1 vrr llUrunr, lilll ami I . I male Tioii liln. In nil II lot . , - l . In fn I, cvcr llmr Uii..in tl.- In until N)lrm. Beware of Fraudulent Imitations ! Sr that our .1. Mnrk Kin. II.Mi.rv . I I U 1 I i iiKgiM . W i on rach juj( Send .r Ih given away ly I I I I jan 1 1 1 14 W 1 AS MILK. t"n dl.7tilfl thai lljn mntt 1' liratc ("liiu li i tk II Krmn r li al.tr mm m n.:: .j: i :kum Kit. . r iln rapidly Caking ll. liC'.Ti'S EMULS10H lun to Iw. til nt T 111" rollrf . I . . f t..- i r ; :, tt ..;.of fui It ackDawlftdeo l 1 - i ani1 Ilrt y, . . COSRX'MVTIO'.. VKlltt.tTT, H I ClllhltKEX, ." feb 10 Di Wly (t .m Kwirr'n Hnrnrio cnrttl mr of ii!ir"""! Folnon flTtcr I Imil x n tr. Vcl In t n ' po-callrd n rtuil.i of Mrrru'r nrnl I'"' i i. ' nt only enrol td.i Ili.xxl 'ni.in, l ui t. : 1 " Khcai.i.'ttlrm vlil.-h w .nn run" I I v t'" mlnrrn!v O Hi . HOY 2ll r. I A v .' rVrofiil elevt 1"J'm1 on my cl m ! , f r ' ' luniji" on In r in rU. c t i vo li. r S ir i I i ' and t!ic rcmilt x in wi;;ili rful nr. I H.i. ( ' 1 H. A. I)r.Al(M(iM. I. ! , '.. i ' Swii-t" SiTf inc In rntlr Iv n i i1 ! and Ik llio mly tncdlrlno whlili j mr .t m rV.rofula, lllood Ilnmor. Ciiur r. 1 1 1 ' ' ' Illood I'niiuin. Snl for ImkiI. o:i 1' ! "., ft'1 DlW'WH, niifllcd frrr. Tv.K Sxvtrr hr iric Co., Iirimr .1. Allnni. mh 29 lv tirm n 11 OOLD MEDAL, PAIII8. I W. IIAKER A: U Breakfast Coci il la tolmhlr. Xo Chemical r vmA In l prrMifmH 1 1 . Ikm Itn. Umm I mKimfk mld th IMfTh. Am.w.H and ta thrt"r thr ttw tjttUtf Im tmmm m ilcltrknw, Bmtrtahittg . r.ri'" . MLT Inurntt, and almi'i tit lnllda aa aa KI4 hj Grfn rrl ' W. BhJEER A CO, Dorchwiter, ti dec 1 IAWm 8 (r an TTio fir y C liourw 'v: Ixunv tli mc nn OiiiiiIm.( ' im fall. ....... dov 1 6m I ,W - J LVALMOST AS PAIATAELI ft-
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 9, 1890, edition 1
2
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