Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / June 3, 1890, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. THE MORNING STAR. ,h J. paper ia North Carolina. published ""ft TtHuy. t $6 00 per year. foc- " ,, thre month,. & cents for one -nooth. to mU wb- 1 J cents per week for any pexwd from one week to one year. THE WEEKLY STAR is published erery Friday mortun at $1 00 per year, 60 cents (or months, cents for three months. ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY).-One wnare one day. t ; d-TV l 75 three days, . ?,?r dv. -!: Ave day. 3 50 ; one week. MOO; tU J 30; three weeks. $3 50; 10 01) ; two months, f 17 00 ; three months. 4 00 H.ths, $40 00 ; twelve months, $60 00. lea Una of wiUd Noapore.1 type make one square. All announcements ot Fairs, Festivals. Balls Hop Pu.-n.es, Sooety Meeting Political Meeting ic.w.Il be charjed regular advertising rates. N.t,ces under head of "City Items" JO cents P f.r rir ttwerttoo. and 13 cents per line for each subse Huent insertion. No advertisements .nserted in Local Columns at an) price. 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Remittances must be made by Check, Draft, Postal . . T - J I ..... fW.lv Monev 4 ruer, r.xaress or ia ici(i5icitu i..... ... c- . U . pk. n.,Ki;eKr s icri rcm::runces win u: a. iuc i. m ..... ivcrt:ers should always specify the issue or issues they desire to advertise in. acre o issue t loe'.idvertisement will be inserted in the Daily. VI h . i .n .....i f . th- rvi 'wr to he sent to i raed iere him d-.innc the time his advertisement is in the proprietor i l Jul- . . . t , . . f the rvlTH-r to v;.l only De resp).isii.'ic io. v t . h; address. Xhc 3ttonxing Jttar. H WILLIAM II. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, N. C. Ti'ksda y Morning, Jlne 3. 1S0O THE SUB-TREASURY SCHEME. The replY of Senator Carlisle to H. F. Howard, of Alabama, publish ed in the Svak of Sunday, stating his objections to the proposed sub treasury scheme for the relief of farmers is the clearest and most forcible statement of that case that we have vet seen. It is entitled to thi more consideration because written by a man who represents an agricultural State, whorTNslje had been actuated bv the desire to win popular favor at the expense of honesty and candor, might have taken the opposite side of the ques tion. Representing, we might say, a constituency almost exclusively agricultural his sympathies are na turally with them, and when he takes a position seemingly at least antagonis tic to them it is apparent that he is actuated by a sense of duty and devo tion to principle which mark the leader and statesman, honest enough and brave enough to differ from his friends, and point out their errors when he believes them wrong. The sub-treasury Scheme is but the outgrowth of the paternalism springing from the protective tariff system, which has been carried to such an extreme that many honest people have lost sight of the nature of our government and of the pur poses for which it was established. Paternalism has taken such root that nearly all the industries of the country look to the Government to take care of them, at the expense of other industries, and to levy tribute upon other industries that they may be made profitable to those who see fit to put their money into them. Agriculture, the greatest and most universal of all the industries, has been the most self-dependent, and the last to put in its plea for Governmental care, and when it does so now after a quarter of century of self-dependence whilst other industries were seeking and reaping the benefits of this un American protective paternalism only shows how far the demoraliza tion of protection has extended, and what its effect has been. Had other industries not been, with unjustifiable favoritism, protected there never would have been any demand for protection from the farmer, and if hundreds of millions of dollars had not been wrung from the people to put into the pockets of the men who run the "infant industries," no sub treasury scheme such as is now pro posed would ever have been thought of. As agriculture is the great indus try of the country, and about the only one which has not received any governmental favors, but has been taxed ever since the protective sys tem went into operation for the ben . efit of others, it is not surprising that it should desire to get some benefit di- gested scheme as this sub-treasury one, the heaviest cost ot wnicn wuu ld fall upon the farmers themselves nut into operation. if That it is a crude and ill-digested scheme, and that it would not bene fit the farmers, but only a small pro portion of them if established, it rallv benefitted any, is shown it by Mr. Carlisle when he points out th fact that the bill only makes pro vi- cion for the building of ware houses in about one-third of the mnnti-s of the United States, V V-a a a and those the richest counties where there is really the least need of them, if needed at all, leav ing the other two-thirds without any This amounts in practice to an u n- just discrimination in favor of the rich against the poor counties, and in favor of the wealthier minonl aeainst the poorer majority. Th poor majority who get none of the benefits would have to pay their pro portionate part of the tax to estab lish this system for the benefit of th minority better situated financially than themselves. One of the strongest objections t the protective system aside from 1 unconstitutionality has been that is in the interest of the rich agains the poor and that its tendency has been and is to make the rich nche and the poor poorer, an objectio n which could be brought witl equal appropriateness against tin sub-treasury plan even if it accom plished all its friends claim for it. Th countv which produces $500,000 worth of farm products ought to b much better able to take care of 1 t- self, to pay its debts, and to get along without Government aid tha the county which produces only s?50.lXK) worth or less. But it i: only the county which can produce: half a million dollars worth whicl claims attention, while the less for tunate sixteen hundred are totally ignored. There isn't the first ele ment of fair play in that. This is onlvone of the objections and not the strongest either, to this crude scheme. There are others stronger, both from a business and a constitutional stand-point, but this alone should be sufficient to con demn it in the estimation of the farmers themselves in whose inter ests it is conceived and advocated MIN0R MENTION. The Reed gang in the so-called House of Representatives believe that the victors are not only entitled to the spoils, and that the "majori ty," to put in their own phrase,"shall rule," but that the majority shall get the benefit of the greater portion of the appropriations for special ob jects. In accordance with this idea the Committee on Public Buildings has decided that when they report in favor of one public building asked for by the Democrats they will report in favor of two asked for by Republicans and in this propor tion they have reported so far. This is surely taking a practical view of politics from a legislative standpoint, and shows what honest custodians of the public interests the raiders who run this Congress are. The merit of the appropriations asked for has nothing to do with the case. 1 he Republicans claim two buildings out of three if they have to build them at country cross-roads. And notwithstanding this dispropor tion of public building bills reported and passed, the first one that Mr. Harrison concluded he would try his veto on was one for a Southern town, and the probabilities are if there are to be any more vetoes on this line they will be about in the proportion of two to one against the Democrats, or rather the South. Some of the extreme Radical or gans in tne iNorth have worked themselves into a high state of ex citement over the unveiling of the monument to Gen. Lee at Richmond ast Thursday, the display of Con federate flags, &c, but the liberal- minded press of the North, Demo cratic, independent and non-political, not only commend the erection of the moument but pay warm tribute to the character and virtues of Gen. Lee. As a matter of fact, while the occasion was distinctly a South ern one, there never was since the war a more patriotic assemblage gathered anywhere, nor one in which devotion to the whole country and loyalty to the restored Union were more marked. This was dis played as far as the decorations were concerned by the flying of the na tional flags which were raised in the proportion of five to one of the Con federate flags, and in the magnificent address of Gol. Anderson, which, while it justly lauded the heroism of the great leader and the men of the South who bore the stars and the bars, abounded in sentiments of de- I now even bv such a crude and ill votion to the Union and the old flag, and. throughout all these proceedings not one word hostile to the Govern ment under which we live was ut tered by any one. These are facts which these ranting organs will take good care not to recognize. Some of the Democratic papers in Alabama have been apprehensive for sometime that the action taken by rertain Farmers' Alliances in that State in bringing forward a candi date for the governorship threatened party disruption and disaster, but these apprehensions were shown to be groundless, when on Saturday after a warm contest Kolb, the farm ers' candidate, was defeated and he and friends moved to make the nom ination of his successful competitor, Thos. G. Tones, -unanimous, pledging him their hearty support, Mr. Kolb volunteering to make a canvass of thr State for him and the ticket The farmers who belong to the Al liance, as well as those who do not, are too much interested in good gov ernment in the South, to be instru mental directlv or indirectly in the destruction of the Democratic party on which the South is dependent for good government. They are not go ing to do it. The organization of the Confed erate Memorial Literary Society at RirhmnnH. the obiect of which IS to collect bv e-ift. purchase or other J r wise books and other literary pro Hurtinns etc.. oertainintr to the war J 7 . ' between the States, is a movement in the right direction, and one which should have been inaugurated years ncro In this wav in time may be gathered in available torm tne ma terial from which the historian may write the South's side of that great struggle. There should be organ ized in every Southern State a simi lar association to co-operate with the Richmond Society. STATE TOPICS. The citizens of Poplar Tent, Ca barrus county, have organized a Me morial Association tor the purpose of erecting a monument in memory of the Confederate soldiers buried in the cemetery there, of whom there are twentv-two. a greater number than are interred in any other ceme tery in ; the county. 1 his is a com mendable movement. There is not a cemetery in the State where Con federate dead are buried, where a monument, however humble it might be, should not be erected to perpet uate their memory. communicated. Wilmington, Onslow & East Carolina Railroad Bonds. It was once said "there is nothing new under the sun," but when I read in your issue of Sunday last the ar gument of counsel for the City, in the form of a letter addressed to Messrs. George Chadbourn, Isaac Bates and William A. French, Trus tees, 1 was forced to think that Sol omon was mistaken in the above aphorism. Is it not a new thing for counsel employed in an important case, to rush into print and argue it before the public, instead of before the Court instituted to hear and deter mine the points at issue ? As, however, these gentlemen, learned in the law, have elected to discuss this case before the public, as their jury, it will not, I trust, be tnougnt amiss it one ot tne jury thus selected shall question the soundness of the argument, as well as the accuracy of some of the state ments therein. in tne nrst place, it seems to me t.i n . a . that the letter of counsel is justly liable to criticism, both as to style and matter. It treats the trustees with disrespect, and even contempt. They are repeatedly informed that they are mere "stakeholders;" they are compared to highwavmen. de manding "your money or your life;" and the counsel express themselves as disappointed in their estimate of the "high character" and "known in tegrity" of the "stakeholders." I am not the champion of the trustees, but 1 do assert that they are gentle men witnout reproach, both as to character and integrity, and should n this discussion be so treated. Are they mere "stakeholders?" A stakeholder is one with whom bets are deposited.- Did the city authori ties, when they deposited their bonds with the trustees, merelv mean to bet" that the Onslow road would not be built; and now having lost the 'bet, are they seeking to prevent the holders from paviner over the stakes?" I trow not. Were not these bonds rather de posited with the trustees as an escrow, to be delivered to the rail road company when the only condi tion provided in the tripartite agree ment was performed, viz: the com pletion of a certain number of miles of track? Now it is not denied bv counsel. that this sole condition has been com plied with, and yet the trustees are berated and denounced because thev propose to fulfill their part of the tripartite agreement, and deliver the bonds as thev solemnlv ' J i themselves to do. Oh times! oh, manners!! It seems to me that there is a sin gular lack of appreciation of facts, and also a looseness of statement, pervading this entire,- argument of counsel. These gentlemen speak of themselves repeatedly as "eounsel of the tax-payers." I deny that tney oc- cunv anv sur.h position. 1 he tax payers of Wilmington, by a consid erable majority, voted a subscription of $100,000 to the W. O. & E. C. R. R. Co., and they have never, to this date, expressed any wish to evade the obligation they voluntarily assumed; still less have' thev authorized the employment of counsel to aid them bv technical obiections to escape from the obligation, on the faith of which the Railroad Company has gone forward and built the road. These counsel are employed by the "Mavor and Board of Aldermen of the city of Wilmington," and are not "counsel for the taxpayers save only in the sense that our property will be taxed to pay the fees of coun sel unhappily. After a somewhat hackneyed quo tation from "a very famous charac ter." the counsel for the Mavor and Aldermen, having sufficiently in dulged themselves with sneers at the Trustees, proceed to give the reasons which induce them to urge the said Trustees to violate the obligations assumed in the tripartite agreement. They say "the construction of the road was not begun within the time (i. e. within twelve months from the ratification of the act) "according to the true intent and meaning: of the act." Mark you: It is not denied that the construction of the road was be gun within twelve months, but these gentlemen, of counsel for the city, with overweening confidence in their own perspicuity, claim to have dis covered that such construction was not so begun according to the "in tent and meaning of the act." Now admit for argument sake, that they are right as to the "intent and mean iner" what have the Trustees to do with these? It is confessed that the terms nominated in the bond were com plied with by the Railroad Company It is to be supposed that the city auth orities, under the advice of the city attorney, did satisfy themselves as to the fact of the commencement of construction, and also as to "intent and meaning" (if these latter affect the Question) before thev issued the bonds to the trustees, and bound them to deliver said bonds to the railroad company so soon as ten miles of road were completed. It is now too late to be urging "mala fides" on the part of the rail road company, in the preliminary work done by them, as a reason why they should not have bonds to which thev are clearly entitled, under the terms of the tripartite agreement upon the completion of ten miles of the road. I maintain that the sole question for the trustees is: Have ten miles of the road been comple ted? It seems to me that the counsel for the city, able as they are, have sig nally failed to grasp the merits of the question they discuss. Note their illustration: "A claims that B owes him a debt A will not sue B to establish his claim, but insists that B shall bring suit to establish that he does not owe it. There, gentlemen, is the case in a nutshell," say the counsel. Such is not the case at all, either in a nutshell or otherwise. .a There is nothing "tripartite" about this case. Here is the case: A agrees to pay B a certain sum of money upon the completion of a specified work, and to secure good faith on both sides they mutually agree that the said sum shall be deposited with C, to be paid to B so soon as the latter shall have satisfied C that the work has been done. Upon the evidence of the completion of the work it is clearly the duty of C to pay over the money to B in spite of any protests on the part of A unless enjoined by law. Perhaps the most extraordinary part of this entire letter is the attack made by counsel on their mun clients, who, on reading, may well exclaim, "Save me from my friends." Say Counsel : "The election for subscription was held on March 1st, 1888, and on March 14th, 1888, the subscription was made and the tri partite agreement was executed. Why this was done in such haste is a part of this interesting story which does not concern us now." Such is the statement of counsel, and such the insinuation of bad faith to draw it mildly which they throw out against their clients, the city author ities, because of the "haste" with which the agreement was executed. I really feel it a dutv, and a pleas ant duty, to defend our city authori ties from the offensive intimation contained in the above quoted sen tence. I do not believe there was any thing foul in the "hot haste," as al leged, with which the agreement was executed. I beg toladd in conclusion, that I have no pecuniary interest in the W., O. & E. C. R. R., but I do feel anxious that the City of Wilmington shall faithfully, in act and spirit, carry out all its agreements as fully as any high-tonea business man would, and I further deprecate the injury to the city's credit likely to result from any effort to avoid the performance of its agreement with the W., O. & E. C. R. R. Co., and with the trustees, fhis I deprecate as a 1 AX-PAYER. During the summer holidays of each year the Duke of Westminster takes in about $5,000 in sixpences and shil- ings paid by sightseers for admission to nis country seat, katon Hall. He erives every penny of it to charitable institutions. CU RRENT COM MEN" There is a good " deal of re tributive justice in this world. Mrs. Canfield, of Kansas, who wrote a letter about a year ago severely crit icising the course of the Southern whites toward the blacks, was a can didate for school director at her home a few days ago and was defeated by a negro washerwoman. Mobile Reg ister Dcm. The equestrian statue of Gen. Robert E. Lee, which is to be un veiled at Richmond to-day, evidences the strong affection in -which the people of the South have enshrined the memory of one who was to them a hero. And even those who neither fought under his banner nor shared his conyictions will recognize his dauntless courage, his deep devotion to an idea, and his calm submission to defeat. In his own person Gen. Lee illustrated those high mental and moral qualities that appertain to the highest type of American manhood. Phil. Record, Dem. The man whom the South honors to-day is one of the most im pressive characters the world has ever seen. He rose superior to de feat and supreme over disaster and ruin. It does not matter in contem plating such a man a man as Lee what opinion is held of the cause for which he fought. This leader was, in the general view, greater than the cause. If he had flourished in an earlier and happier period he might have to-day the homage of everv American as he has the homage of the South. Wash. Star, Ind. PERSONAL. Mile. d'Alee, niece of ex-Em press Eugenie, at her wedding received gitts which were valued at $1,000,000. Mr. Gladstone has. rented the Raith estate at Kirkcaldy, Scot., where he intends to spend the coming autumn. Archdeacon Farrar says he de sires to impose a limited period of celi bacy upon the English clergy, being of the opinion that it is a choice between celibacy and beggary. - The clay pipes which Alphonse Uaudet smokes originally belonged to Gustave Flaubert, who, on his death, left them, together with other things of more value, to Uaudet. Annie Besant, who is soon to visit America to preach theosophv. is a most interesting platform orator. She is not a particularly pretty woman, but her lace is attractive and full of force. Nina F. Layard read a paper on the 5th of May before the Victoria In stitute in London, in wnicn she com bated some of Darwin's theories regard ing rudimentary organs in man. This is said to be the first time that a scientific paper of a woman has been read before the society. POLITICAL POINTS. The Republican party loves the soldier precisely as it does the negro for the vote he casts Uttca Observer. Dem. I he economical fit of the Pre sident only extends to the votiner of public building bills for Democratic towns, and hence the subsidy grabbers and pension agents are not restraining their ardor to any extent. St. Lout's Post-Dispatch, Dcm. Why did it occur to the Repub lican National. Committee in 1888. when in need of vast sums of money to cor rupt elections, to "fry the fat" out of certain classes of manufacturers ? Be cause they had grown fat off the high tanlt. Lleveland Plain Dealer, Dcm. Blaine's friends are making strong declarations just now that the secretary of State no longer has the Presidential bee buzzing in his bonnet. He is reported as favoring some other Republican candidate for the honor, while himself will be content to be again a senator irom Maine. Mr. lilaine is evidently a wise man in his day, if these reports be true. He realizes that the deluge for his party is coming in 1892 and he hastens to get it in out of the rain. He is not pining for more record as a deieated candidate. v. v. star. Dcm. Advice to IWotliers. tor over fifty years Mrs. Winslow s Soothing Syrup has been used by mothers for their children while teeth ing. Are you disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suf fering and crying with pain of Cutting 1 eeth t . 11 so send at once and get a bottle of "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing byrup lor Children leething. Its value is incalculable, it will relieve tne poor little sufferer immediately. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures Dysentery and Diar rhoea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the bums, re duces Inflammation, and gives tone and energy to the whole system. m rs Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for children teething is pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of one of the oldest and best female physicians and nurses in the United Mates, and is lor sale by all drug gists throughout the world. rrice twenty-five cents a bottle. tJe sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup." t merit Wins. We desire to say to our citizens, that for years we have been selling Dr. King s New Discovery for Consumption, Dr. King's New Life Pills, Bucklen's Arnica halve and Electric hsitters, ana have never handled remedies that sell as well, or that have given such universal satis faction. We do not hesitate to guaran tee them every time, and we stand ready to refund the purchase price, if satisfac tory results do not follow their use. These remedies have won their great popularity purely on their merits. KOBERT K. BELLAMY, t Wholesale and Retail Druggist. Read advertisement ol Otterburn Lithia Water in this paper. Unequaled for Dyspepsia and all diseases of kid ney and bladder. Price within reach of all. t XjCtw- Prices COFFEE, STARCH, SNUFF, SOAP, CRACKERS, TOBACCO. Consignments Cotton, Spirits Turpentine, Tar and Lumber carefully handled. mar o tt wuuu x. uukkih. COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MARKET STAR OFFICE. June 2. SPIRITS TURPENTINE. Quoted 34J cents oereallon. No sales . " . . - reported. ROSIN. Market steady at $1 15 per bbl. for Strained, and $1 20 for Good Strained. TAR Firm at 1 35 oer bbl. of 280 Bbs., with sales at quotations. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Distillers quote the market firm at $2 70 for Vir gin, $2 35 for Yellow Dip and $1 25 for Hard. COTTON. Stead v at 11 cents for Low Middling. 114 cents for Middling and 11 cents for Good Middling. RECEIPTS. Cotton 5 Spirits Turpentine 302 Rosin 1,270 Tar. : 04 Crude Turpentine 44 bales casks bbls bbls bbls DOMESTIC MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Financial. New York, June 2. Evening. Sterling exchange quiet and steady at 485487. Money tight at 512 per cent.; closing 12 per cent bid. Govern ment securities dull but steady; four per cents 122; four and a half per cents 102. State securities neglected; North Carolina sixes 124; fours 102. Commercial. New York, June 2. Evening Cotton dull; sales of 115 bales; also for last week not before reported, 290 bales for consumption and 382 for export; middling uplands 12Jc; middling Or leans 12 ll-16c; net receipts to-day at all United States ports 548 bales; ex ports to . Great Britain bales; to France : bales; to the Continent 721 bales; to the channel bales; stock at all United States ports 184,898 bales. Net receipts bales; gross receipts 5,055 bales. Futures closed steady, with sales to-day of 102,800 bales at the fol lowing quotations: June 12.3512.3Gc; Julyl2.4612.47c; August 12.2712.2Hc; September 11.3511.36c; October 10.78 10.79c; November 10.581 0.59c; De cember 10.5710.58c; January 10.01 10.62c; February 10.60 10.67c. Southern flour dull; common to fair extra $2 503 00; good to choice $' 15 5 35. Wheat quiet and firmer; No. 2 red94cat elevator; options fairly ac tive and irregular; closing firm; No. 2 red, June94c; July 95Jc; August 94,78c. Corn active and stronger; No. 2, 40'2 40c at elevator; options moderately active and steady: June 40lc; July 41ic; August 41c. Oats firmer; op tions quiet and easier; June 32c; July 32c; No. 2 spot 34435c; mixed Western 3235Jc. Coffee options closed steady and quiet: June $17 40 17 45; July $17 1517 20; August $17 0); spot Rio steady and quiet; fair cargoes 20c. Sugar raw active and firmer; fair refining 4JgC; centrifugals, 96 test, c. refined fairly active and firmer; C 4 15-165 l-16c; extra C 5 3-165 5-10c; white extra C 5 l-lG5Vc; yellow 4 13-lGc;oft A 0558c;mould A G .1-1 Gc; standard A G 3-lGc; confectioners' A o lo-ioc; crusneo 08c; powdered Gc; granulated 6kc; cubes 6c. Molasses foreign firmer at 19c for 50 test; New Orleans quiet; common to fancy. dl45c. Kice quiet and steady; domes tic 5c; Japan 5Gc. Petroleum lower; refined $1 30. Rosin steady; strained. common to good $1 42J1 45. Spirits turpentine dull at 37U373.rc. Pork quiet and steady; mess $13 7514 : extra prime Sll U. Heel lirm; extra mess $7J257 50; beef hams strong at $16 50; tierccd beef firm; city extra In dia mess ia 5U13 00. Cut meats quiet and weak; pickled bellies 51r.i3, shoulders 558'c; hams 9K10c; mid dles quiet and easy; short clear $G 00. Lard barely steady but quiet; cash $6 27; city steam $5 80: June $0 2G; July $6 38. Freights steady; cotton 5-04d; grain 2d. CHICAGO, June 2. Cash quotations areas lollows: rlour unchanged, w heat No. 2 spring 9292Kc; No. 2 red 9292Vc. Corn No. 2, 33?s'c. Oats No. 2, 2634c. Mess pork $13 20 13 25. Lard $5 955 97c Short ribs $5 105 20. Shoulders $5 20. Short clear sides $5 GO 5 70. Whiskey $1 09. The leading futures ranged as follows opening, highest and closing. Wheat No. 2, June 92, 925o, 92V: July92. 93M. 03; August 91 , 93. 92. Corn No. 2, June 33i, 335o33K; July 337; , 34, 34. Oats No. 2, June 2C5a, 20, 26; July 26, 26, 26; August 21 1 24, 24,t. Mess pork per bbl June 813 25. 13 27!, 13 20; July S13 40, 13 47, 13 37; August $13 5.1, 13 55, 13 47. Lard per 100 lbs June $G 00, 6 00, 5 97; July $0 12W, . G 10; September $6 35, 6 35, 6 30. Short ribs per 100 lbs June $5 17J4. 5 17U, 5 12 J July $5 30, 5 30, 5 25; September $5 47. 5 47, 5 45. BALTIMORE, June 2. Flour quiet and unchanged. Wheat southern quiet and steady: Fultz 8692 cents; Longbcrry 8G ya cents; western dull: No. 2 winter red on spot 89 cents. Corn southern quiet and steady: white 4245 ccntsr yellow 4041J cents; western easy. COTTON MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Juue 2. Galveston, nominal at ll5ac net receipts 10 bales; Norfolk, quiet at 12c net receipts G bales; Baltimore, nominal at 12c net receipts bales: Boston, firm at 12gc net receipts 10 bales; Philadelphia, steady at 2c net receipts 207 bales; Savannah, quiet at 12c net receipts 102 bales; New Or leans, quiet at U)c net receipts 131 bales; Memphis, nominal at llc net receipts 20 bales; Mobile, firm at llc -net receipts 75 bales; Augusta, firm at lljg12c net receipts 0 bales; Charleston, firm at llc net receipts 45 bales. FOREIGN MARKETS. By Cabla to the Morning Star. Liverpool, June 2, noon. Cotton Business moderate at easier prices: American middling 6d. Sales 8.000 bales; for speculation and export 1,000 bales; receipts 3,000 bales, of which 2,300 bales were American. Futures dull Tune and July delivery 6 39-646 38-64d; July and August de livery 6 41-646 40-64d; August and September delivery 0 40-G46 89-64d; Seotember delivery 6 40-64d: October and November delivery 5 61-G4d; No vember delivery 5 58-G4d. 1 enders of cotton to-dav 28,000 bales new docket and 700 bales old docket. iicji sicauv ricmntwl holders offer sparingly Corn steady; demand f.,,r western 8s 5d. 2 P M American ini,,i;,. Sales to-day include! .m,! American. 4 P. M. Cotton - Futurr, 64d. seller; June am! July 1; ler; July and August C .:; ;) August 0 37-Gld, seller. An-,,' tember 0 37-G4d, seller. S. G4d, seller; Scptetnlx-r .,,,'.! 30-C4d; November and ,., , , 645 57-04d. Futures c near months and steady , , NOTHING SUCCEK LIKE SIM ( ,sv 1 1 1 CAUSEDSBY MICROBES, AMi Radam's Microbe Killer Exterminate thr Mi(n l syiitem, and hrn that n ache or pain. Komatfr simple aw of M.il.m.i I . eae, we cure thr in all at diea,c cntitutnman . lit.. Afctlimn, 'oiiaiiuillii, i iiniili.t; cllltla, ItlirmnMlUm. K lilt,, , Llvrr IHoraar, hill, male Troublra, In ull ll- Intn In fan I, rvcrj llUcax Human Sjatrni. Beware of Fraudulent Imii .'nil in Srr I h;it imii I. M.,,l on ( a. h niu Send (or I. N I Him. fciven away hy I i jan 11 I A V 1 y CAUTION 11 r . I h 11 j. . I 1.1, 1 1 bottom. If tli I-iIit rml llrMt to rnflort- rrtlliig n.MtrMftHl price. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE FOR CENTLCff N. tt I.actMl i.min in '" moor Walrrpnmr, neat in iiii wnnn. """ ft.OO KM lK IMM "I ' H'l 4.AOIMMI-Knill Will .H l3.ftn I'lll K K AM I AltMl I Mior H3.AO I'.Xl It U I I' U I M'I 3.8rt A." 3 WOIIK I Ml 2.00 and l.7ft IHIVV Hl kHr All male In ( iti)rr Hiiii-.i. ' ' I ' $3&$2 SHOES ld.?i i.7fl Mini: rlt Mtl V Brat Material. U-at Mil. !. I W. I.. Iouclaa, Ilrxxkton. M. '1 II jan 11 Cn til th Tho Secret of Honlth la tlif pimrr to ml, ll;ft anal aln'Hi" projwr quantity of unlrwinir I I II'" ran ii r Ito t hm -av hi ! I n pip i It .. i In the tein. Tlio MmmI miiat Im- i'ihiW, It ia t he Ital principle, rwititft Ina- il.riiti evrrT part of t he ImmIt. Ir. 1 ti 1 1 I'll it"-! ail Impurlt lea anil vltullae t he m hole m ! A Noted Divino fmy: "I have leen ualnir Ir. Tntfe IJut WW tlio paat three month fr iljprpi. I Itnnini'li Bllil iiervoune. I m n i l.n.l "'" thing to ilo me ao in in h jol. ' "" '' them aa I he liewt pill In I'tUtriM r. iii.-I m,i I ran tnai(tialnt nllipri allh tlx It They art a apet lal hleaalna;. Ile. V. It. OS.HI, n Tutt's Liver Pills, FOR IM H;'! I'M . ricc, 25c. Office, 33 4 41 Tark ri.r.r. I jan 21 DAWly tu tf, Or lh I.laaar llnMl. rnalt I ' I ' 1 br utlmlnlaterlna Or. Hain't (Jalilra xarrlnV. It rati ha cIvimi hi a cup i.l i.n - ' "' .r, rri tlcl ft teat lot dual, without Mia know i ' i it and anowdr cura, whether t'" i1"'1 MtanlA .1pHr.hr ar far An lr.tir! Ir n-i KV Kit PAIIX Ovar I OO.O"" 'I""" r ' HpaclBo in awn maoa im i temporal moo who bar ta" I their onfTwa without tio-ir ""'"J" trailer toar oolt lnnk (tt. tM today trail thr ooll iraa 111 4H patabook of i an JOHN II II l I'l mylTt)SVly m tu lli nti.l WbUllyBaMU rure.1 at I ' out coin- It"" ''' ' '''' tlrtilar. w-t.t I 1. W lilMllll M' ,., Jul' N hiu Ub 13 D4W1 tu 'h ' ORKNEY SPRINGS, iii:na mm ii t t. MKK RF.SdKI I iK II I Plraitirr. 7 hr fim-M i litn;.t tl.. Virginiai. C'hmatr vity mIiiI" ' " Average mean Irmi rtatun m I " nummrr month Thr larv' ninnhrr 1 n i i controlled by th ( (imiany, m;W aort of all thu highly fa..ril ' Sutra. Pure apring water, tirtfri t ilia.i.ni excelled cutinc, billiar1 room I "i ' " men, bowhn alry, troinf ...int.. i.1.' Pool in the Virginia. n nrcheatra in attendance durum 1 ' Propertr 1,000 acrra inritrnt. itI"i . finrat mountain arrnery in thr ...nut'. r'or ciJcuu.r and term addf my a) Jm tu th aa 1 . W I NOW SWEETEN THAI aaAtlnUa.in. COFFEE with m i; i STAN D A K l I 'r K A N I I N I 1 1 ' , 100 Will i K r.X'l KA t . , I t.Ol.DKN t: HALL & PEAKSAI.I- mv 1" 1W '
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 3, 1890, edition 1
2
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