Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / May 22, 1890, edition 1 / Page 2
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N3 Wtts one fou PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. tup vtORS'iN'C STAR, the oldest daily news THE H"w Carolina a published daily except p.per in J" 13 (J) for six montU $1 SO toadjy. at 5 00 per year, . S.bevdtoei.y "' li cents per week for any penod from one week to one I li cents per the wfekly star Pe Frid im'i in n ... 1 i . . ,t C! 111 rrrr vear. WJ cents 101 I nts for three months. li.. ,-. VI- thrw weeks. l 00; one c imj, v . ---- - . mmi. f-o months. 17 00: three months, yu , months, nuw;iwClc u... --- olid Nonpareil rp one n- - -,: .k. ftririOO. lenunesoi All announcen .ncements of Fairs, Festivals,. Balls i"0! I KiMS t -- ' 11 urmrr v r W 111 I ScV?"!",Z&b for 6rt insertion, ana la cen 1 1 auent insertwa. .L " . I T No .dv-eTtmo.nrtl in Local Columns .- ""vi'vertments tnserted once a week in" Daily wiUbe charUvl per square ?' e a wee7 other .Uv. thrre-fourths of daily rate. 1 wice a ween. t ichini of Jaiiy rate. CMnmnmcation. unless they contai v.....i -.n.f nmorr v subiectsof real interest. ceptable in every ether way, rcted if the real name of the thev will invariably be meet author withheld. An extra charge will be made for double-column or triple-column advertisements. N'ot .t es , of Marriage or Death, Tributes of RP Resolutions of Vhanks.4c. are charged for as ordi- .iirv aavernsements, DUt oniy - r---- rly m advance. At this rate 50 cents will pa for a s.mPle announcement of Marriage or Death. Advertisements on which no specified number of in v,r, ,s marked w.U be continued till forbid, at XL of the miblusher, and chared up to the date . i 'l . wh.'n n.i ;ti tor ot Jisctnt:nuunce. Vmusement. A .cf.on and Official advertisements, ne dolUr per siu-.re for each insertion. V Ivrrtisrmentsto follow reading matter, or "PT jn" Uci..: place, wu! he charged extra according to V v,-rt:sements kept under the head of "New Adver ,;,,, w.U be charged fifty per cent, extra. Vlvert.sements dlsrontinued before the time con tracted for has expired charged transient rates for time aer ially published. ust be made advauce. known parti' r strangers with proper tt-rrnoe, tiv.iv p.iv ni"iu:i.j ntr v t . ..lt JrlJ recommendations of candi- " ' "', H.'r- ' he' her in the snap of coramuntca " " . t ,v'l he charged as advertisements. ...i.i rt'tirtcr v Accoratnir i 11 not be allowed to exceed anything foreign to their regu- , iv.;:yii: extra charge at transient rates. Kiuttances must be made by Check Draft. Postal ,.,-v Order K.xr.-ss or in Registered Letter. Om - -.,t;am-rs w-.Ii be at the risk of the publisher. .,.;vrs ,-iouid .:-ivs specify the issue or isur5 .... .1 . sr in. here no issue i inn"" T.-ir w.'.I b' -nsertrd in :hc Iailv. Whrrc V-.'. ...e h-s i Svertisement i m the proprietor "K'.rs-.n-.sioie for the mailing of the paper to .,..-,-,. f,r the rvEcr i b srn: to him The Ttlormng JJtav. WILMin H. HKUAltD. WILMINGTON, N. C. IS'.iO. 1 1 k s : v v M..RMNO. M w A FAILURE. l. S. Henderson, of Salis-Rt-presentative of the 7th dis- . '. .. . ..... ,!.. tb ot tlllS MltC i'l VOliyit?.-, vi v. l i.iii ri t i ui L (Kit Cl.ircu Hi umuiMiiuii i.vv...... the present House of Representatives v.. the meanest that had ever as sembled since the establishment of the Government. If the opinion o f the people could be got we think a very large majority of them would e nl.re t ders. 1:1 as lis declaration of Mr. Hen enresive of their senti- ::-cnts. It is not only the meanest but it is th, :n. st trilling Congress that ever ..sembled in Washington. The ma- pcity ni p.t v egan tntiing wuu mv. nn and with the people before thev got well settled in their seats. The first thing they did was to or ganise a conspiracy to swindle the Democrats out of a certain number it seats which were contested, and they did that to the letter of their Nothing stood in the nri jraninie. wav of this, neither figures nor facts, t... .1..;, ,.,tii,l i-mintinc thev : LV LllCll lilt till 'V. I-'. - . I - I omul turn a n.,m,i,-nlir m.lioritv OI l.tui.-v.i..- j-- , l i.ooo or 1.-.im)) into a Republican majority of :.t or more, a peculiar process that would make an unso phisticated man's head swim. The next thing was to elect a Speaker who had the requisite amount of brass and a sufficiently smalt amount of honor and con science to carry out this conspiracy. The next thing was to draft and at 1' i ! pt a set f rules which would put It ll)S OilltelV ill IIICII 0v.l vw v.nii M.it the lawless acts they meditated to perpetuate their power regardless .;" the popular will. Uef.-re the adoption of these rules the unscrupulous Speaker after a thorough understanding with his fellow conspirators, arrogated to himself the power to declare when a quorum had voted, to say what a quorum was and to count a quorum when the roll call did not show a quorum present. This done they were fixed for busi ness and prepared to carry out their devilment. The justification for this extraor dinary and revolutionary procedure was to facilitate the transaction of the public business, and to prevent the minority from retarding it by obstructive tactics and dilatory mo tions. They have now been in session for live months and a half, and with their stolen Congressmen, their au tocratic Speaker, and their new rules to -facilitate the transaction of pub lic business." what business that the people expected them to do have they done ? They have done nothing that they J should have done and nearly every thine that they have done they m nn HnnP As for lecis- . , .. none of it. All their energies seem to have been bent upon devising par tisan measures, and in carrying them through by the foul methods planned and agreed upon in the y TU councils or me conspiruvuis. . pension bill which if : c.,11,. KAr.m n law will take at 1 L Hum 1 jr uv-i-uu'i- " " ) - least $1,500,000,000 out of the pock- out of the pock- cis vwv. 1 1 ' - f . tho mnmn npnn p. suuie iL;- . : KIllo t,rn nr fhrpp hlin- I ail( ..... e I dred private pension bills, scores of uiuuiiauun uiiu, v v, 1 ... u..:i: Kill. ,nH cnnHrv Fr ' . , -f th 1 1 I 1 I w I I I I I I I I I I I I' I II I I Q11U t W nt hop cinirlp hill for d " i j , v v ..-4. ...cfi, i tk 1H I If-" I 1 C I I I 111 Lilt gislation has all been of a partisan f . I or class cnaracer, anu .c, u . i i K f I it inspired by the hope to eaten or control votes. The only thing they attempted to do in the pretended interest of the peo- nle is the new tariff bill which they pie is the new tantt piu w y have patched up, a Din which piease, no one but the comparatively iew inpfiriaries who will be still more : u A K.r t ind n-l-iof Vine nrnvfi 1 I , be a shameni. travesty both in its construction and in the me thods of its conduct through the House from beginning to end. j This is the record, one of disgust ing disappointment to the people and of shame to the men from whom they had a right to expect some thing. As a Congress it has been a failure, a dismal failure. If it had started out with the avowed pur pose of disappointing public expec tation and of ignoring the popular will it could not have succeeded bet ter and perhaps not so well. What a record this will be to go before the people on next fall. MINOR MENTION. The majority of the Wavs and t.-in fnmmittpp nrofpSS PTeat in- I terest in the prosperity of the Ameri- UpGn an industry of a good Republi can farmer, ad to humbug the can state like Vermont, is incompre tarmer into the belief that they real- hensible and merits the towering in ly felt this interest they gave him dignation of the maple tree tappers protection on certain farm products, ()f that staid commonwealth. Per- which don't amount to a continental. But in this paternal interest they do not include the farmers of the South ern States who raise cotton, for not satisfied with the tax which was al ready on cotton ties, they have in the McKinley bill increased the duty from o" to 14 per cent. In dis cussing an amendment offered by Mr. Savers, of Texas, to put steel and iron hoops, to be used in the manufacture of ties, Mr. Blanchard, of Louisiana, showed the unfairness of this tax by calling attention to the fact that would increase the cost of ties to Southern planters $ 1,U (.. ooo a year, and that this was an an nual tax as the tie lasted but one .i year, wnereas me ia. vn .sieci iuuj was paid only once in ten years, the rail lasting that long. In ten years the planters of the South will have paid $10,000,000 for ties in excess of what they have heretofore been paying. In reply v v i t i a r T) C to Mr. Ulancnara -ur nayiie ot Pennsylvania, and Burrows, of Mich igan, contended that this tax would build up the cotton tie industry in this country, and at no distant day the cotton planter could buy ties IX- -limiior th-in hn r.T ri tn-n.1V. rSOIl- v...v.cM,v. - - , .1 -I-i sense and hypocrisy, Dotn. 1 ncy know better. This is the same old cant repeated by which all excessive tariff taxation is justified. We were told in the beginning that a few years protection would build up American industries, and then they could take care of themselves. Now after twenty-nine years of this fos- trin., nrotPrtion thev are louder in their demands for it and for more of it than ever and seemingly from their own statements, more dependent upon it than ever. If protection be necessary and anything short of absolute prohibition of foreign hoop iron would build up the cotton-tie industry in this country it would have been built up long ago. This increased tax is not to build up more manufactories of cotton-ties, but to put more money into the pockets of F . ... . the men who own the tew whicn are now in operation. Mr. McKinley, by the way, chairman of the commit tee, who takes so much interest in the farmer and pleads for an increase of duty on wool to help the strug- gl.ng wool raisers, couldn't see why ' s .' , .. iron for cotton-ties should pay any less duty than any other hoop iron, nor can he see why the Southern formr tuhn hannpns to live on a c-; f th lin. from himself i i i 1 1 r i r. 1 1 l siul. w i vnvy v - should be entitled to any fair play or favors under his tariff bill. Of course the amendment was voted down. There is an organization in Wash ington known as the Wage Workers' Political Alliance. We don't know much about it, but it carries a pretty heavy name. I T . . 1 Vi ... It came, to the front IlCil V V LI dill C. A t vaiUv, fcv . tiiiwu h - 7 r. - 0 i i nocnou nv iirr'ir,T u i 11111 lhiuuu Senator Ingalls (from which we in- fer that t is a colored organization) fnr th nhol t on of meta monev. the responsibility for which, how ever, Mr. Ingalls respectfully de clined to assume. This would be heroic treatment of the vexed ques tion which is now giving the states men in Washington, and financiers throughout the country, so much trouDie. t criL-fs at the root, and radically solves that question by rele- J. L a . r mtoi invino- it on the shelf Jdllilij inv J O d everlastingly Knocking tne doi- nut .-if thp nirkP -ln-ine-S Ul uia- torn out ot tne niCKei in c . . . , . ,, 1 chine. There are evidently bumc financiers and statesmen in the Wash- a . U Ko in fntltrrPSS ance who oueht to be inuongresb, nnf, ho would nret this COUlltry all - , rirrhr If tnev WC1C Liicii-. i-- . tUm "Rut- ji nn- , whinton. where . ; they can t ao an 5 a reaping machine, don t amoun .to much as a political factor. 1 hey should move to some other town, finforce their de- inthefaces ma..ua 3 b of the statesmen. Vermont is a dyed - .n - tne - woo. Kepuo,,,a,. but sue nas a K..caw. " I been slighted, snubbed, ignored and ne nas left out in the cold by the manipu- uitors oi me iitrvmnj' i"" i r .l. nfr:nUiT torifl hi I Thev provide a bounty for sugar . , u u;ntp thf si- ra.sers. those who cult.vate the sa charie substance in cane or beet, and have totally overlooked the maple sugar industry of Vermont. Tues- of the nay wneu mc "s"1 iv- k;m ! honnties were being discuss- Qttrt of Otevari, Ol I ed in the House, Mr. Vermont, gently intimated that if bounties were applied to sugar, he thought maple sugar ought to come in for its share, and offered an amendment extending the bounty to it which was voted down nearly two to one. This ignoring of and delib- nnlolr nni 1 heavilv sitting down iiaps thev don t think Vermont ssca pje amounts to much in the of life, or maybe they don't take ma pie sugar in their's. STATE TOPICS. It makes the Danbury Reporh sad to see long trains of wagons passing by daily empty, to come i i i l.l ...if U ft-fi1i-7rc hay. pack i iaueu - . j meai, snip slum, au, ex.. v. ..v. ter to think that these same wagons ... . I . 1 , 1-.in 1 1 T t t" i I Will go to town loaucu uunii .Tin. i th,rm nn.l mmc back through the i T mm flour hav 111 IIV.1 uauv-vi 7 r vVc, to feed man and beast. We are not su prised at the Reporter's indi rect protest against this senseless ,rhirh is nnrsued to such a tnhnrm nnd rnt 1 LUl. V..1l-nv ... - - - ton growing sections 01 u.c otaic. The one-crop system has been the bane of the North Carolina farmer, and always will be so while it is fol- lowed. In some years it may pay, or certain individuals may be so sit uated as to make it pay, but in the long run and for the farmer gener ally it will prove a failure. To in sure independence and permanent prosperity there must be diversified farming and the farmer must raise his home supplies on his own farm. CURRENT COMMENT The Boston people have made i Uaii' mingle thnr o-ood manners and good morals must be taught in ULI Llltll illlllVIO l. .11. " - " in the public schools in that city, it is supp0sed that the exhibition of "manufacturing" manners made by Representative Walker, of Massachu- setts, in the Mouse tne otner uay ,i,,.'nt nlpncp thpm 'savannah Arews, Dem. All who "egged on" the dis- orderly conduct of Saturday, or who failed to try to suppress it, earned the censure of the House in its or- gan.zeo .. ""V . - c Dowever lur. jjvhuui oi xuuia..,, was so censured. He strongly de- served it, and, as he is a Democrat am0ng an intensely partisan Repub lican majority, he got it. nau ne been a Repubhcau-he probably would have escaped, as Mr. Bayne of our State did. Phil. Ledger, Ind. The McKinley bill has been vprv successful in one respect it has put everybody into a brown study, if a large majority of "everybody" don't like the bill, why, how could it be otherwise witn sensiuie peopier The elect few whose private axes be grQund tQ a razQr edge by thfi bill are praying with the energy of a windmill in a gale that it may be- come a law. Of course-; it will be -., money in their pockets. A big bank - account a few surplus millions is a consummation devoutly to De wisn- ed and if these elect few can mani- pulate the policy of the federal gov- ernment to suit their private ends it Will UC a vcij futnu vi,n.6 : 1 1 l .. tin nrr Ia Hn interesting statistics. Here are some interesting criminal ctatkt rs- In the last ten years viz v.-w- - Vw . v . . nersons were committed for trial in i i . Fno-land and Wales for the crime ot wHful murder 0f these 299 were sentenced to death, 231 acquitted and 14.9 aH ndo-ed insane. Ol the yy j j 4-u iATOrft execu- conaemnea to ucctm - -- - , ted and 145 had commutations ot sentence; of the 299 fifty were wo men, of whom nine were hanged. STANLETSHANCE. The Beautiful and Gifted Woman Whose Heart is the Explorer's. The announcement of Mr. Stan- VJSZ . i T Ar, Kv enrnnse. nant nas taten juhu" j r although many of his friends now re member that what little preference he ever seemed to have for the oth er sex was for the beautiful woman he is about to marry, says the Lon don correspondent of the New York Sun. Miss Tennant is, in fact, just the woman to capture a hero's heart, as she is just the woman to wait for a hero peiore iumus ----- c T I and stately, though rather d,shing type of beauty She is about thirty years of age, and is the a Je late Charles Tennant. ghe lives with her mother in a beau- dful house in Richmond terrace, whfre she has a studio fitted up, for she is known as an unusually clever n as a lad of faShion One of her fads has been the street A rah and several of her best paint- ings in the Academy have been of the S1 " ."".r;, veur caiuuhiuu vi. i . nr over a railing on the Thames J W -and shfhashad a class Qf gmall outcastSj to whom she has l - -'c incrrnrrion given an uuui lvw each day for a number of years, Miss Tennant is the original of the Miss m well known picture, No or Yes," in J , , renresented as medita tjng Up0n tlie answer to a letter she holds in her hand. Watts has also - pa.ntea her rortne awuc u ..u ? a squirrel in her hand. Altogether, .1,1 .ror tncmnn n VPrV SU- Ll't? UK CAU1U11.1 uixj . . .w. , nerior woman for his wife, and she marries him with the full understand- inf that if he returns to Africa she goes with him. ROLLING GLASS. A New Invention that will Revolutionize the Trade. Scientific American. It is stated that an invention has been perfected in the glass industry which will accomplish acompieieie- volution in that branch of manufac- ture. Until the present it has only been possible to produce sheet glass producing glass plates ot great breadth and of any desired length Dy means of rolling. Glass thus produced is said to possess a far greater homogeneity, Has on the upper suriac a uuo.a 1 . r . 1 : 1 1 : which jg hardly to be distinguished from art plate glass. The material ofthe invention consists in the 1 ' C il nnA..1lnf nnln application oi tne pev.unai, uuuu- lated, hollow metal rollers, heated from the inside by means of steam i-i ii : U nr crn i nese rollers ;ciac luc stickv liquid glass, which is con- ". 1 . r a. t.... r ducted to mem irom rne uouom ui a melting tub, without the interven- tion ol any otner apparatus wnai ever. To prevent the soft glass rovpred with an extremely tnin coating of wax. If the new process is extensively used window glass will be considerably cheapened THE ROAD RUNNER. A Queer Sort of Chicken to be Seen in California. i,iQ Mnrm.io folic thp T onic . ... V X t "'I : Globe-Democrat: When I was in California I was'fortunate'enough to see a very queer bird, which was en- tirely unfamiliar tome. One day 1 was driving in the country with a inend when ne canea my attention to a bird in the road ahead of me. It was something like a prairie chicken, - 1 11 1 1 A - i but much more slender and graceful I in hnilH 1 wc not nsino- its wincrs. I 111 WI.4..V. ,. v .. " " ' t O ' but it moved very rapidly, and we had to keep the horse in a pretty good trot to keep up with it. My friend told me that it was a "road-runner," a bird that was noted it. iviy there tor its pedestrian accompnsn- I mntc nnH a npmliar habit thev have is to walk always in the centre of the road. The miners are very ionu ot mem, ana never injure uiem because they kill rattlesnakes, and the manner in which they do it is ftxr.eecnnffiv interesting. vnen uicy meet a serpent and it smiles blandly . . u: ' uie roau-ruun a masn, tne mm uei dv A to think it will become the victim of its charm, and while it is keeping the snake in doubt as to its inten- tions it runs about in the cactus and nirk; off the thorns with its bill llu?JtTLZ r' fnd th; cropping tueui in a ciioic aiuuuu u C 1 i 1 1 . 1 . n .nm nlatolT, SnaKe UUL!! il Hits mm tuiuj;iti.ti; surrounded by cactus thorns, and then it flies to some elevation and sits there to watch the snake stick himself to death on the thorns, try ing to get out of the ring. The Famous Lady Tiger Killer. Levant Herald. The pursuit of "the grand sport" in India has brought to .the front a iaay tiger Kiner oi great skiu aim J prowess in the person of Mrs. Evans Gordon. Ihis tearless lady, as a j member of the recent Cooch Behar I hnnrinor pvnpnifinn QhOt an ail PTV 6 -"f - . . tigress wuu was lusuiug viuuusiji i upon the party, and was actually within a few yards of her elepnant s trunk. Her shot, we are told, was as wen umcu as it w wen ttimcu, i . - i j for the other guns engaged, includ- i. . . i it i y ins; that ot tne iaay sportsman s, husband, Major Evans Gordon, had failed to stop the furious brute. It I is aciaea mat tnis unuidui dui.cvc- CLUIIUUM I u t muniiii, u y 7 I 'f, . . J ... .1 ...-.,,. I I-,,, h nivinrr n no ow ov lie. wiiin I cn etrnncr win inc reimsvi vaiiia iv.mvy was then cut separated and polish- cracy that gubernatorial candidate nuu reiroieum uim, v.UUv ... IT n , Vmerican -lass manufac- it to be necesary to disclaim that they Parkers S7 50: refined here S- 40 ed. An Ameiican glass manu rac com5inin ith anybody against the Rosin steady and quiet; strained and tureris, said to have succeeded in S'n'"s 'nlihiiities. mmon to Imod ft 142U. Spirits tur- ment adds one mdre to the many laurels and tropfiiei already won by this dauntless TSdy in the hunting grounds of Cooch Behar. Opinions by the Supreme Court. Raleigh News and Observer. Opinions were handed down Mon day as follows : Beyer vs. league, num xwij-w., no error. , Mosseller vs. Deaver, trom bun combe; error; new trial. State vs. Chissenhall, from Dur ham; no error. Adams vs. Ciuy, rrom ndmc, petition to rehear allowed. PERSONAL. Lotta is said to be by all odds the richest actress in America. Bishop Newman has been ap- nointed to visit Japan and aoia trie Mpthodist conference there in July. Methodist conference TJ T?,nVc Oenerai lMaiuainci . , enioys the reputation ot Deing tne most courtly ana poiii-e&L man i 0 ton city. Senator Eustis was assaulted in Washington the other evening by a col ored man who was employed in the cir cus to take tickets. Miss Forsythe has secured the d of M. Victorien Sar- dou's new play, "Cleopatra," which will be Mme. Sarah Bernhardt's next crea- tion. r,or'c hrnthPr the Crand . : omp LuKe viexis, is going lw i.x .. 4 friends through Siberia, and show them how 1 pnsoi how like an earthly paradise a Russian prison-pen is. Elsie Hall is a 12-year old pianiste from Australia, who is attract ing attention in Lonaon. one nas uccn elected to a scholarship at the Royal College of Music The Belgian King, Leopold, is saiu to couLciiiuidi-c a juuuii-j ;nrr ntnmn xvith a j . ri4. n immr V.; LUUIIL1V 111 niv. wuu..6 uu.u , -ipii rA arrnn crl n cr for futher develop- ment of the Congo. . ix, & - Mrs. Edward Morrell, of Phila- delphia, lormeny jvuss urexe. c- .... , , , i ceived as a present a colt irom tne mare II11V.L nvvi j v- -ino rurn m l nir i iHtihr i i t i n 1 1 -i 1 1 1 1 iivjvv the property of Mr. Childs. ' . . POLITICAL POINTS. Ben Butterworth unquestion ably realizes that the people are awaken- onrl thcif thnr intpnH to hold tO stct accountability their representa- tives who are charged in Congress witn the making of the Charleston World, Dent. Mr. Cleveland is apparently so In devising a special gag law . - . ,1 U 'ash. Star, Jnd. . .. r -i " -a j: : trust even their own followers if full de- I nuovv.iv... " .... bate is perrnitted. It is a pitiable con- fesson of the weakness of their pet measure. Detroit free Frcss, Uem Superintendent Porter says that o ivnth rpnsns shall be above sus- nicion. The "iniudicious" statements made at the Pittsburg banquet by a I T U1.MA .irVtHi itTroc- ltnrr i nrornincuL icuuunuiii. win v,ot.& with a full-grown campagne "jag" made I it imnprativplv nprpssflrv that Mr. For- - -"r.' , -A ter snouiu Sciy svjiiicliiihj, ciuvj uv. o, A ri it. Houston rosi, uem. . . . For over fifty years MRS. winslow b inTuivr Qvbiip has hppn used bv broken of your rest by a sick child suf fering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth ? If so send at once and get a 111. a k. 1 Jiuu V Wk 1 - W a J 1 1 . : U.4- j-I bottle of "Mrs. Winslow s boothing Syrup" for Children Teething. Its value IS lnCaiCUiaUlC. IL Will IW-VV V.IV, pw,. 1 1 .. V. 1 T. 11 V, r nnnr little snffprpr immed atelv. Ueoend I i .i : m;,i,0 UPn ""C?: ZlZ::r I about it. It cures Dysentery and Diar I rhcea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, I cures Wind Colic, soltens the uums, re- auces iniidmiuiuu.., ..m v ;h inr Svru'.. for children teethi is pieasant to the taste and is the prescription of one of the oldest and best female ohvsicians and nurses in the uv- " J it . f United States, and is for sale by all drug- I orists throughout the world. rnce I C5 " C , , , . twenty-nye s cencs a e-,cD""ic . - , , Is Consumption Incurable? Read the following: Mr. C. H. Mor- ns, JNewarK, ahc., says: vyas uowu I with Abscess of Lungs, and. friends and physicians pronounced me an Incurable -' nQw Qn my tKird bottle and ablc to oversee the work on my farm. It is the finest medicine ever made." i Jesse Miaaiewan, L'ctdLui, wuiu, says: "Had it not been for Dr. King's rw rWovprv for Consumnt on 1 would Waseiven up by doctors. Am now in best of 1,U1, " Trir'if "iamn phntt pe frfp at Robert R. Bellamy's Wholesale and Retail Drugstore. t Read advertisement ol ""erburn Llthia Water m this paper. Unequaled Dyspepsia and all. diseases 2of kid- and bladder, I Price within reach of i gjj r STOP AT ST. JAMES HOTEL. EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN PLAN, Goldsboro, N. C. Elegant accommodations for Ladies. Finest Hotel in the city. Specialties : Chicago Steak, Quail on Toast, Lynn Haven Bay Oysters, &c. mar 14 tf EDMUNDSON BROS., Proprietors. ATKINSON & MANNING, AGENTS North Carolina Home Ins. Co. -if tp OFFER TO THOSE WANTING INSURANCE AGANIST FIRE Policies in this. Old and Reliable Home Institutioc. All losses promptly paid. W. S. PRIMROSE, President. CHARLES ROOT, Secretary. PULASKI COWPER, Secretary. lor the regulation oi tnetariu uibujssiuii firm Cut meats quiet and weak; mia the Republican leaders show that, rigid dies'easy. short clear $t 10. Lanl easy as the party discipline is, they dare not . . ' Western steam SO 37K bid; COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MARKET. STAR OFFICE, May 21. SPIRITS TURPENTINE. Firm at 35 cents per gallon. Sales of receipts at miotations. ROSIN. Market firm at $1 20 per bbl for Strained and $1 25 for oooa TAR.Firm at $1 25 per bbl. of 280 JK?.. with sales at quotations. CRUDE TURPENTIN b. uisiuiers quote the market firm at $2 55 for Vir gin.. $2 30 for Yellow Dip and $1 25 for Hard. COTTON. Steady at 11 cents for Middhnff. 11! cents for Middling d im cents for Good Middling. 7 baies 484 asks bbls bbls SpirilS AUiycuLW.. Rosin 1,438 344 T&r lar Crude Turpentine 1JU bbls DOMESTIC MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Financial. Nrw York. Mav 21. Evening.- Ctoi innr nnift an d steady. Money close at 48 cent., closing offered at 4 cent Government securities dull hnt steadv: four per cents 122; four and , half torrents 103. State securities I rritoH North Carolina sixes lJ. . i,v.s.wx. j fours 99. Commercial. New York. May 21. Evening- Cotton Net receipts 58 bales; gross receipts 4.0G2 bales. Futures closed steady; sales 126,000 bales: May 12.37 19. ar- Tune 12.39(al2.40c; luly 12.43 12 44c: August 12.3012.31c; September 11.4411.45c; October 10.8810.H9c; I Nnvpmher 1U. I ffliU.izc uinm-i - T in'-qinrir- 1 0.G9tfftl0.70c: lanuary 10.310.4c, ,a riniin fo I February 1U.miu.oc. nri i.:u,. I Southern Hour nrmer. wnwt u.Ki-., No. 2 red i oi5iuim a ,r i tinns r ospn sieauv a.u -oiiaiv- "' " . Ko 'd Ma" Sl 01; Junc jv'-v, n r' ' j ' . . i , 1 40404cat elevator; options moderate ly arrive Mav 40Uc.June 40J8c; July 41c. Oats stronger; options-quiet and firm; May 34)c; June33c; July 33jc; No 1, spot 3335c; mixed western 3235c. Hops quiet and firmer. Colfce options ciosea steauy, iia "" 1fi 7r,- lime ft!6 4010 50; luly $10 15 16 35; spot Rio quiet but firmer; fair cargoes 19c. Sugar quiet and steady; fair refining 4c; centrifugals, 90 test 5c; refined quiet and easy; off A 5 'g Mn asijps foreign linn anu quiet: 50 test 18c; New Orleans quiet TOOd nentine dull at 38c. Pork quiet and . u . f , stronc:tierccd beef SlfXUV. V V UUl 111111 -.7 " ' I uv.1.1 ....... . 955 80- June S6 41; July $0 53. Freiehts steady; cotton 3-32d Chicago, May 21 Cash quotations are as follows: Flour unchanged. Wheat No. 2 spring and No. 2 red S)iy.c. Torn No. 2.33 Jc. Oats No. 2, 28?8c. Mess pork $13 00. Lard snort no sides, S5 255 30. Shoulders $5 10 I fr flA CUrf -loir c i rl PC HL 4 . ) uh . ) P.). a juvh. v- Whiskey $1 02 Thp le.adinp-f " " u;ut ,nH Hirm. Wheat uLciiiiii; iiignv-ji. "-"- w...0. I vi. o f n)5 flftl" O.'i- Innr 414 i ino. , iviiy 'vijg, vv.X2 j 9GU, 95; July 93i, Joi. 'J4fB. orn vt n H OOI Ql 1 Vl- liinf i Nfl. 6. lVlilV Oliro, VI17J.I " 1 i"..v, z 33:Julv 34U, 35. 34. Oats N-g 28y 28. Junc 20;8, I . . I - J. , , cct t &T, July ai,4, w;8. mesa .Iki li tioas is 40 13 20 Iird I I-'- j V ' nor 100 tts Tulv SO 30, 6 32 0 30; Au gust $6 47, G 47. G 47. Short ribs per 100 lbs July $5 40, 5 45. 5 45; Sep tember $o 50, 0 0U, 0 00. Baltimore. May 21. Flour dull, firm and ll nchaneed. W'heat southern I - 0 . I AnrrKnm; fill qu'. ruiwo.,- 1...., fihM cents: western strong: ino. nts: No. 2 winter red on spot and May 92V cents. Corn southern dull; wiutc 4243 cents; yellow 4243 cents; west ern firmer. COTTON MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Mav 21 Galveston, nominal at 1 1 He- net receipts 54 bales; Norfolk, firm at 11 15-16c net receipts bales; Halti mro nnmlnol ot 19. Kr net receints 3 baieS: Boston, quiet and firm atl2?c- 1HW1V., I1V11I'II1I' I. - . net receipts 65 bales; Philadelph.a, tirm atiac netreceipts Daies; aavduuau, 12 4c net receipts quiet and firm at 11 ll-16c net receipts 755 bales; New Orleans, urm n 11 13-16c net receipts 137 bales; Mem phis, firm at llc net receipts 2 bales; Mobile, firm at llc net receipts 120 bales; Augusta, firm at llc net re ceipts 221 bales; Charleston, firm at 11 c net receipts 17 bales. FOREIGN MARKETS. By Cable to the Morning Star. Liverpool. May 21, noon. Cotton firm and in fair demand American mid- dling 6Jd. Sales 15.000 bales; for specu- I litinn anH PTnnrt' 9.000 ha PS: reCClDtS 12,000 bales, of which 5,100 bales were American. Futures firm May and lune delivery 6 33.64d. June and fuly delivery 0 33-04 0 34.64d; Juiy ancf August delivery 0 g64 36.6d; Aust dclivery 0 35-646 36-64d; August and September delivery 6 33-646 34-64d; September delivery 6 33-646 34-64d; September and October delivery 6 9-64d; October and November delivery 5 62-640 3-04d. Tenders of cotton to-day 700 bales new docket. Wheat steady; demand poor; holders offer moderately. Corn quiet; demand poor. 2 p M Cotton: American good mid dling 6 ll-16d; middling 6 9-lCd; low middling 6 7-16d; good ordinary 0 5-10d; ordinary 6Jd. Sales of American cotton to-day 11,100 bales. 4 P. M. Cotton Futures: May 6 35- 64d, seller; May and June 0 35-04d, seller. June and July 0 36-04d, seller; July and August 6 38-64d; August 0 38-64d, seller; August and September 0 36- 64d, seller; September 6 36-64d sel ler; September and October 0 10-04 d, buyer; October and November 6d, buyer. Futures closed firm. poss.hle customer; permanent bus.ness; tory assigned. Address with .tamp, Consohda ed Ad justable Ihoe Co., Salem, Mass. tuthsa mvU4w G) TV , AGENTS make from $3,000 to 15 000 per year Canvassers from M to $10 per day ... : Jnr Adiustable Shoe. Every Iafy NOTHING SUCCEEDS I-IKK SL'( ( 1 caused :by mimokes, AM. Radam's Microbe Exterminate thr Mmt I.. i. yitem, and whrn itiat n ache or pain. N niAit-1 simple mm of MaUri-i I . i eac, we cure thrm all : il dinca.ni cnt it ut in.il '. . ABtbma, 4'oiiaiir.ipiloii, i ''"li.it K Ivl In '. Kill II. rllltlB, lll.CIIIXMlU.il. Ijlvrr IUbcbbc, litll- i.i ,,, male Troii lie-, In nil ii- . .,. Ill nrrj a. . . ., ,, , Human S)l in. Beware of Fraudulent Im'ii! See th.it in I i ' on each jut: Send f-.i II -. i given away ! I'nii-t 1 jan 11 DAW CAUTION vv-:v,;:7, tiotlom. II tin- ili-mcr -!.. oml Ilro-t to filirj. t in Ii price. o 9 W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE FOR CCNTLEYtl Fine Calf, limyy III W a w ' --- HAna Tl rk f t-1 r nr WntTiirrtoi. Itoiit III ill ni. I ' " r.o.i " km-i m: ) - ' ;" 4.ooiiam)--i. i; y. i i i ."v,..r 3.ftO I'OI K I m; ' V,, ' ' ,""r 2.mi i;x i l i ' i y. "' ' . H2.(Hi niwi i.:r. r.o-- i ur All m.nl'' In Court'" ' $3&$2 SHOLft n.7n Mim t Brat Mitrlil. I' s W. I Doiicl:". Iro.i" , . I., .i I M' jan 11 Cm ldn.o.'in Pr.1 i.tl - i -ISiliotm !;- Ok v linn- lr", n kjiL I" 1 1 l.il v. ' mi 4 V. ! I .Wl 1 1 'MIX I il! li-l. nnv lli !. CfcUUli lio.l lli-ir m iiUi.ll oi . II.. "" Gr.iiis Fifteen cr.ndfc. I, f IH. nil, iitnl lin.l Ik 'ii 1 '" tl 1. 1 toll. '' ti' ' " ,,, null I 1 I, Ins at. i1 ffv. nril iv J l ll I . .' ol f. .!: nrwr l.T1 " ' ... , in ' ,,1. . nti'l lJ" . .... . i- ..i . . . ,, i.i. W.i .U til 1.1' . ! GIVE STRENGTH AN 3 H..r3 'SClL an'Jl II V Wl v in mmm Or if l.liimr 1 1 r t. .t . I ..I"" ' lj u.l?nlnUlrpiBa Mr. lli"- i.omrn r' ' It rn c ' 'i ' 1 ' "r "' ' ' '' Ctelannf fl. "1 1 k " ' ' " c (t la aboluinr immiw, l '' Hnl an1 iflT cm. ' .IrlnkiT or ii" .. . ..! ''I N KV Kit FA I I no1rt vrr I fin. if" bfn mini ip' n ' " bp5ic m '.' r ft1- "." ,;; , ,, ad tofcy t--: ' " " J . ' njl 4 i f " my 17 I U h v.. I inrnnnl nnfl I (iiuitill ri' LI VVI jvvi vai.v . . ui INM HAM II our Liverpool, Eng land 1'oln ir ' I -'1 laini i a.ijii'tr.l SMITH &HOATVIlI(.Jl'r-' Af-' m 4 tf I WbltB'T 1 V I Bank of Now Hanover Authorized Capital Cash Capital paid in Surplus Fund 300 0 200 OA DIRECTORS W. I ' "; r . G. W Wll l.l A I ) ) N A I . I M m K M II. VOl.l.KKS. J. W. ATKINSON. SAAC IIATKS. G. W. WILLIAMS. WU. L. SMITH The Sanitarian. A MONTHLY iV the rtTVU. M' ... ii I : I'HVSK Al Cl Hi ' " . ber. Sample CJ'-. ' ' ' .tamp.. A. N HK LI- . . Second rinrr, " ' Tub Am.uk an N'l '( , Chamber. St... Nrw . ik " dealer, will r.d.rder. CoKHKSI ONHPNt R: ' ' from Newwlealer.. all '" tarian, and all l'k " 1 " ' to the Fxlit-r. Ki-HiTiAN i ' by pontoffire rler, rritwtcrr'i ' draft on New York or l'r1. Km t . m I' i t ' ' ' 1 Kilk AT A I ii m a m-M n h i 1 , . . . . ... ... .'I Irb I I lA it ting for the country they nave aone "
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 22, 1890, edition 1
2
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