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3?Ixe SHomitia Star
-X-
By WILLIAM II. BERNARD.
WILMINGTON, N. C.
Sunday Morning, July 13, 1890.
For House Representatives :
GEO. L. MORTON,
M. J. CORBETT.
For Sheriff:
FRANK H. STEDMAN,
Foa Clerk Superior Court :
JOHN D. TAYLOR.
For Register Deeds :
JOHN HAAR, Jr.
For Treasurer :
JOHN L. DUDLEY.
For Surveyor :
M. P. TAYLOR.
For Constables :
Wilmington C. M. HARRISS.
Cape Fear J. T. KERR.
Masonboro-JOHN MILTON.
Harnett W. H. STOKLEY.
Fe lera: Point J. DAVE SOUTHERLAND.
For Coroner :
JOHN WALTON.
A MISGUIDED POLICY.
There is to-day in some of the
Western States a movement amongst
the farmers, both within and out
side of the Farmers' Alliance, that
threatens to revolutionize politics
not only in those States, but to ex
ert a powerful influence in national
politics as well. Being Republican
States and under Republican domi
nation for years, the movement is
directed either against the Republi
can party or against the representa
tive men ot that party, whom these
same farmers have honored in the
past and for whom they , have re
peatedly voted for high and honora
ble positions.
Republican politicians are very
much concerned at it, and well they
may be because it is a positive de
monstration that they are losing their
grip upon the people, and are threat
ened with a loss of Congressmen
enough to change the political com
plexion of the House of Representa
tives and possibly in 1892 send a
President into the White House who
was not trained in the same political
school with Mr. Harrison.
This movement has become so po
tent and is so well organized and led
that at least five of the Western
States have beco me doubtful. The
farmers of those States, who are in a
worse condition than they have been
for many years have been investiga
ting the causes of their trouble and
have satisfied themselves that it is due
mainly to the oppressive legislation
of the Republican party as represent
ed in one or both Houses of Con
gress since the late war. They bore
the burdens until they began to go
down under the weight, and then,
not until driven to it by a
sense of self-preservation, , they
demanded reform and a light
ening of the burdens which pressed
them so heavily. They asked for
tariff reform and a reduction of tariff
taxes, and instead of giving them
this the McKinley tariff constructors,
ignoring the demands of the farmers
and of the great body of consumers,
gave them a bill shaped in the inter
ests of the already favored classes,
adding to the bttrdens which the peo
ple have borne "for years and still
IT.
There was so-called tariff revision,
a mere mockeryjbut there ws nore
form and hb reductiorvof the tribute
which the unprotected cqnsumerwill
have to pay to the protected manu
facturers for years indefinite if
the Republican party should succeed
in holding the reins of government.
.TThis1 with the wild pension legisla
tion and other reckless, lawless and
extravagant legislation convinced
these farmers that they had nothing
to expect save through a political
revolution, and hence they are en
deavoring to elect men to Congress
who will give reform and lighten the
burdens the farmers and working
men of the land hae to bear. This
is their fight and it is for this they
have girded up their loins. They
have in it the sympathy and, directly
or indirectly, the co-operation of the
Democrats in some if not all of those
States.
Southern farmers are interested in
this movement, for they, too, have
grievances and burdens to bear, but
they are not burdens and grievances
for which the Democratic party is
responsible. They are the result of
the financial, tariff and other policies
of the Republican party, against
which the Democratic party as the
friend of the farmer and the toiling
millions has contended year after
year. The only hope of relief to
the Western or Southern farmer is
in the triumph of the Democratic
party, and in the recognition and
establishment of Democratic princi
pies in the administration of the
government.
Hence we cannot understand the
misguided policy which would lead
the Southern farmer who is a Demo
crat, or not a Democrat, if a man of
good sense, to contribute directly, or
indirectly, to the weakening of the
Democratic party in the South, or to
its defeat, thus helping to keep a
Republican majority in Congress,
while their farmer friends in the
West are struggling to overcome
that majority. In doing so, while
the Western farmer is trying to re
deem the West, the Southern farmer
is helping to Republicanize the South,
thus blindly injuring himself and the
Western farmer, and defeating the
very purpose that each desires to see
accomplished.
Good policy would suggest to the
Southern farmer if he would speedily
secure the relief which he and the
farmers of the West are struggling
for to keep the Democratic party
in the South solid, to strengthen the
hands of the Democracy, and thus
help to secure that reform majority
in Congress for which the Western
farmer is making such a strong fight.
This is the view which every reason
able man who comprehends the situ
ation will take of it.
MINOR MENTION.
Autocrat Reed, not content with
running his own mob in the House,
is undertaking to run the other wing
of the Capitol. His hand is visible in
the caucus of Republican Senators
which was held Friday night, when
the subject of changing the rules of
the Senate for the closure of debate
at the will of the majority was dis
cussed. Mr. Edmunds was chair
man, and he appointed a committee
to report how that result can be ac
complished if deemed necessary.
This will be not the first time
this subject has been mooted
in the Senate, but it is the first time
that it has been presented for caucus
action, an indication that Boss
Reed is making some progress on
that line. Mr. Edmunds can't favor
that proposition without eating dirt,
for he, a short while ago, when a
proposition was made to close de
bate at a certain time on' a billlhen
pending, opposed it, remarking that
"there should be one House in this
country where there was freedom of
debate." In the debate on
the silver conference committee
report a few days ago, Sen
ator Teller cuttingly referred
to the gag rule methods which pre
vailed in the House which he "could
not speak of patiently." There is
dirt for him to eat, too, if he favors
it. There are other Republican Sen
ators who are known to be opposed
to introducing the gag rule into that
body. The only object in undertak
ing to do it now, is to force the pas
sage of the election bill, as there is
no intimation of obstruction on aay
of the other bills pending before the
Senate, arid while there will, doubt
less, be some Senators like Hoar, In
galls, Spooner and Chandlier, who
will favor it, we doubt very much
whether they can whip in Senators
enough to succeed in thus revolution
lxing the mode of procedure in the
Senate.
. .
The Washington correspondent of
the New York Sun says that the
Democratic and Republican Senators
have come to an informnl under
standing by which the debate on the
tariff-bin will be closed and a vote
ttad at the end of ten days, and the
election bill will go over ttntit Del
cember; This report , has gone out
from several sources. .But the action
of the Republican caucus of Senators
Friday night, in discussing the sub
ject of changing the" Senate rules so
as to "close debate, at the 'will
of the majority," throws some-doubt,
on this report' or shows that the
party whip has been plied in the
Senate wing of the Capitol. For all
that, caucus or no caucus, we don't
believe they can play the gag rule in
the Senate nor force that election
bill through before the snow- comes.
In the mean time, the people will be
heard at "the ballot box arid when
the Senators read their verdict the
boldest of them will have no more
stomach for force bills.
A Boston correspondent of the
Philadelphia Times, in a lengthy re
view of the political situation in the
New England States, says that "no
where in this country is the change
of feeling upon political questions
more marked than in New England,
and unless the opinions of the strong
est men of both parties in this State
are entirely valueless Massachusetts,
at least, will be a very doubtful
State in next year's Gubernatorial
battle and again in the Presidential
campaign in 1892." The principal
cause of the change is that the man
ufacturing interests which have been
kept in theRepublican party by strong
sectional feeling, have become tired
of the protective policy which has
proved so detrimental to many of
them, and absolutely ruinous to oth
ers. Their demands for free raw
material have met with such little
recognition from the Republican
party that they are now looking to
the Democratic party as offering the
only hope of relief in that line.
Stop the sectional cry, bury the
bloody shirt, and the Republican
party would soon be as dead as a
last year's mushroom, even in New
England.
There was a conference held at
Columbia, S. C, Thursday night, at
tended by four hundred represeta
tive Democrats of the various coun
ties of that State to consider the
Tillman movement. Addresses were
made by Judge A. C. Haskill and
other prominent Democrats urging
the people to frown down this effort
to disrupt the Democratic party
which rescued the State in 187G, and
to rally to their Democratic colors
as they heroically did then. The
Register says: "It was one of the
finest bodies of men we have ever
seen. Nothing could be finer than
the spirit manifested on all sides." A
committee was appointed to draft
resolutions expressive of the sense of
the conference.
STATE TOPICS.
The Spirit of the South is a Repub
lican paper published at Rocking
ham, Richmond county. It is as
radical as it knows how to be, radi
cal enough to believe in the force
bill, even in the bayonet feature of
it. Sometimes it gets "proud," as
we discover by the following which
we clip from this week's issue:
"We were never prouder of anything
in all our lives than we are to see the
Farmers' Alliance taking steps to down
the political tricksters that have hereto
fore been ruling this district. Our neigh
bor the Rocket seems to think the only
salvation for any man, be he black,white
or any other color, is in the Democratic
party; but we are inclined to think dif
ferent, and have an idea that the Farm
ers Alliance will show him they think
the same way."
The Spirit is not a very hefty or
gan but doubtless in thus giving
vent to its great and irrepressible
joy it expresses the sentiments of the
Radical leaders in this State, who are
also "proud" of the movement which
they hope may create such divisions
in the Democratic party as will give
them a chance to slip into power.
But the Spirit man will not be so
"proud" after awhile, nor the other
fellows either when they discover
how they slipped up and how too
previous they were. The Demo
cratic Alliance men of North Caro
lina are not as easily duped as some
"proud" Radicals think they are.
CURRENT COMMENT
.- Election law or no election
law, industrially the South is on top.
Its majestic progress cannot be ar
rested by the devices of all the ma
lignants this side of seo. --Petersburg
Index-Appeal, Ind.
Our present pension system
carries part of its obligations to the
latter end of the next century.
There is some consolation, however,
in knowing that the actual fighting
of the war will be over then,, even
for Foraker and Ingalls. Phil.
Times, Ind. -
The best customers the peo
ple of the Northern States ever had,
or ever will have, are the people of
the Southern States. They "buy
more from us, and sell us more, than
all the rest of the world together.
Why, then, should we harass our
brethren, our partners in business,
our;yclosest friendsr by legislation
promotive ,;pf political i disturbance
antjS raceiiconflicts?-1 , ; Record,
Deni. I'!
iihThe most flourishing industry
in this country now is the admission
into : the Union of rotten borough
Stales. . This is being carried on by
Tom Reed's Congress in order to in
sure Republican ascendency -in the
Senate for many years to come, re
gardless of the popular will. The
admission of such communities as
Wyoming and Idaho to the privi
leges of Statehood is a gross outrage
upon the American people. In
dianapolis Journal, Dem.
A PENSION HALT CALLED.
The Leading Republican Organ Proclaims
It.
New York Tribune.
If the entire population is 66,000,
000 about one person in eighty-eight
of the population receives a pension,
and the amount so appropriated is
about $224 for every person on the
rolls this year. Out of all the money
raised by customs, internal taxes and
miscellaneous receipts for the bene
fit of all the people, nearly half, is
paid over to one-eighty-eighth of
the people, and little more than one
half is expended for all other na
tional purposes. Yet there are fur
ther bills proposed, and clamorously
urged by pension agents, which would
take out of the Treasury about $2,
000,000 more.
The Tribune thinks it time to say
that this is going too far. The meas
ure of proper expenditure for this
purpose has been reached, if indeed
it has not been passed already.
While any part of those who saved
the nation from destruction were
subject to want, or their widows,
children or helpless parents, there
was an honorable feeling that they
should be remembered by a powerful
and prosperous people, even though
in the attempt to do so avenues
should unavoidably be opened for
extensive frauds. But the people
will certainly stop somewhere, and
then, if appropriations for this ob
ject seem to them excessive or frauds
too numerous, there may be a flat
refusal to continue the appropria
tions they have already made. He is
not the true friend of the soldier, in
the deliberate judgment of the Tri
bune, who now asks for further ap
propriations in his behalf.
The youngest of thoss who served
in the Union army must to-day be
about 47 years of age. Only one
eighth of those living at any time
exceed that age, so that of the 7,000,-
000,000 male adults who were living
when the war closed not more than
900,000 are living now, and over a
third of these are Southerners. A
voting population of 12,000,000 will
not long consent to pay more than
half the entire revenues of the gov
errfment to a twentieth of their num
ber. Further appropriations for
pensions cannot be asked without
imperilling the continuance of all
grants for that object.
THE WAY MAH0NE WENT.
Kolb, the Alabama Candidate Getting
Beady to Jump.
New York Times.
Montgomery, Ala., July 9.
From absolute quietude to intense
excitement has been a quick change
in Alabama politics.
Since the last State Convention in
June, when the Alliance missed cap
turing the Democratic organization,
bag and baggage, by a very narrow
majority, there has been some sup
pressed feeling. The Alliance, while
outwardly proclaiming its allegiance
to the regular ticket, has been dis
satisfied and discontented, and the
Montgomery County Alliance has
gone so far as to declare in resolu
tions that it was swindled out of the
nomination, and that it was going tt
vote for Kolb, the leader, in Augus
anyhow. Kolb has apparently been
discountenancing this sort of thing
and publicly avowing his allegiance
to the ticket. He was recently put
on the list of speakers to canvass
the State under the auspices of the
State Democratic Executive Com
mittee. Yesterday the campaign was open
ed at Eufaula and Kolb was the first
speaker on the programme. He made
a passionate Alliance speech, and at
tacked the utterances of other Dem
ocratic leaders. Privately he went
even further than that, and said
that he was going to take the stump
and combat some utterances of a
regular Democratic speaker in Shelby
county.
Every Democrat present was out
raged at Kolb's speech, and Chair
man Tompkins, of the State Execu
tive Committee, immediately notified
Kolb that unless he sang in a differ
ent key his name would be stricken
from the list of speakers and an ad
dress issued to the people of the
State explaining why this was done.
The affair is the chiet topic of con
versation in Alabama to-day.
Treating:.Doar Bites.
. St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
A good thing to do for a mad dog
bite is to fill the wound full of pow
der and touch it off. This meets
snake bites too. An efficacious and
aboriginal plan is to procure half a
dozen young live fowls, cut the skin
from thewside of one, and put the
raw spot against the bitten part. In
a few minutes take another fowl and
use it in the same way. Four will
probably die, the fifth will get giddy,
but not die, and the sixth may not
be needed. Such a treatment for
dog bites is handier than and as re
liable as the mad stone.
Mrs. Windom is the croud dos-
sessor of a sofa which camelfrom Wash
ington sjneaaquarters at valley Forge.
TWINKLINGS.
The habitually profane man is.,
the precurser of everything unpleasant
Elmira Gazette. .. .:' ; V
"'' "Avoid whisky and water, my
Son," said the fond father. "It is a dilu
tion of a snare." Racket.
A local census enumerator tells
of a woman whe, in reply to the ques
tion where her two children were bornv
said: -One over to mother's and the
other the pare room." Wall Street
News.
Say, Babbetts, did you ever-:
propose to my wife.
"Why do you ask?"
"O, because, when I gave her your
love, as you told me to in your letter,
she said 'Chestnuts.'" New York
-Herald.
Lady How nice you removed
that bunion.
Chiropodist Yes, I have had con
siderable experience, I used to do all
the carving at one of the biggest hotels
in this city. Texas Sif tings,
Magistrate -What is your
name?"
Prisoner Smizz.
Magistrate I want your full name.
Prisoner's Friend That's his full
name, your honor. When he's sober
his name is Smith. Detroit Free Press.
"Hab yo' got any medicine dat
will purify de blood?"
"Yes, we keep this sarsaparilla at $1 a
bottle. It purifies the blood and clears
the complexion."
"Well, boss, hasn't you got sumfin'
fo' about fifty cents, jess fo' de blood?
I don' keer 'about the complexion."
Life.
The "illuminated cat," which is
made of pasteboard, and designed to
scare away rats and mice, will do very
well until it is attacked by some fierce,
prowling Thomas that knows nothing of
the devices of science. What is needed
is an illuminated cat that will yowl and
fight. Louisville Courier-Journal.
PERSONAL.
General Albert Pike, who is at
the head of the Masons in this country,
is 74 years of age.
Chauncey M. Depew is a cousin
in the third degree of both Senator
Evarts and Senator Hoar. -
George Kennan's articles and
lectures are being widely distributed,
having been translated into German,
Russian, Polish and Bulgarian.
The Countess Tolstoi is de
scribed as a tall, beautiful woman, who
is fond of society. She was in London
lately as a delegate to the Liberal Wo
man's Federation.
James Russell Lowell's physi
cian does not allow him to drive or to
ride in a street car, but he can take
short walks around the grounds of his
place in the suburbs of Cambridge.
Ex-Senator Fair, according to
the Jewish Progress of San Francisco,
"has so much regard for the precepts of
Judaism that he is contemplating an
early entrance into the path that leads
to Judaism."
An Englishman of means not
long since bequeathed a legacy of $15,
000 to the association of French drama
tic artists, the yearly income of which is
to be set apart for the purchase of real
champagne for stage banquets.
POLITICAL "POINTS.
If the Grand Old Party could
only make statesmen as rapidly as it
makes States, what a great party it
would be. Dayton Times, Dem.
Every political wrong commit
ted upon the South by the Republican
party is committed upon the North as
well. Every political wrong of this char
acter will however return to plague its
inventor. Richmond Times, Dem.
If the Reed philanthropists of
Congress, are so very anxious to do
something worth while for the colored
brother, why don't they pass the bill
lately introduced in the House giving a
pension to Pompey, his sisters, his
cousins and his aunts. Forth Worth
Gazette. Dem.
"Census Superintendent Porter
has informed the Republican leaders,
says a Washington dispatch, "that the
first count of the population of the
country may be completed by the first
ot August. .Notice, if you please, that
he has "informed the Republican lead
ers" not Congress. He knows what he
was appointed for. Cleveland Plain
Dealer, Dem.
Island Beach Hotel!
J. A. BROWN, Manager.
jjaving leased the above named
Hotel, situated at the Hammocks, I am prepared to
cater successfully to the wants of the public.
The tables will be supplied with the choicest viands
of the season.
Many places of great interest in the vicinity. Surf
Bathing, Bath Houses . in still water, fine boating
facilities, unrivalled fishing, and above all an unex
celled Cuisine.
Cottages on the Beach connected with the Hotel.
Prof. Miller's Celebrated Band engaged for the
SCASOD
OPEN MAY 13TH, 1890.
J. A. BROWN",
my 11 tf MANAGER.
Summer Resorts.
HEALTHIEST PLACE IN AMERICA.
HOT SPRINGS, N. C.
Dry, Bracing MOUNTAIN AIR, BEAUTIFUL
SCENERY, The FINEST BATHS in America, a
Sure Cure for MALARIA, RHEUMATISM,
GOUT, &c. SWIMMING POOL, with Bathing
Suits as at Seashore; Bowling, Billiards, Tennis, &c.;
HEALTH, PLEASURE, HOME COMFORTS and
an UNEXCELLED TABLE. Address
THE MOUNTAIN PARK HOTEL.
Hotel rates, $15 to $25 per week. Cottage Board,
$8 to $12 per week.
. mv 22 25t tu th su
The Hewlett House.
yRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, NEAR THE
Switchback. Now open for the accommodation of the
public.
Fresh Fioh, Soft Crabs, Deviled Crabs &c, ready
on arrival of trains. Oyster Roasts a specialty.
Board by day, week or month. Comfortable lodging
rooms, with new furniture.
Bar in separate building remote from Dining Room.
je 5 tf JAS. A. HEWLETT.
SWAMANOA HOTEL,
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
FINE MOUNTAIN VIEWS. ELECTRIC
Cars pass the Hotel every ten minutes.
Attitude 2,339 feet above sea level. Average sum
mer temperature 70 degrees. Terms $12.50, $15.00,
$17.50 per week. RAWLS BROS.,
je 21 lm Proprietors.
-COMMERCIAL.
W IX M I N G TON MARKET
- 1 STAR OFFICE, July 12.
SPIRITS TURPENTINE. Firm at
39J cents per 'gallon, with sales of re
ceipts at quotations.
- ROSIN Market steadyat $1 Ql per
bbl for Strained and $1 12 for. Good
Strained.
;TAR. Finn:at 1W per 'BBt: of 280
lbs., with sales at quotations.
CRUDE TURPENTINE. Distillers
quote the market firm at $2 50 for Vir
gin, $2 35 for Yellow Dip and $1 25 for
Hard.
COTTON. Steady at 11 cents for
Low Middling, 11 cents for Middling
and 11 cents for Good Middling.
BEOEIPTS.
Cotton. 18 bales
Spirits Turpentine 354 casks
Rosin 1,117 bbls
Tar 68 bbls
Crude Turpentine 57 bbls
DOMESTIC MARKETS.
(By Telegraph to the Morning Star.
Financial.
New York, July 12. Evening
Sterling exchange dull but firm. Money
easy, closing offered at per cent.
Government securities dull but steady,
four per cents 121; four and a half
per cents 103. State securities dull but
steady to firm; North Carolina sixes 125;
fours 99.
Commercial.
New York, July 12. Evening.
Cotton dull; middling 12c; low middling
11 9-16c; good ordinary 10 ll-16c; net re
ceipts to-day 184 bales; exports to Great
Britain 1,031 bales; stock at all U. S.
ports 104,123 bales.
Cotton Net receipts 140 bales; gross
receipts 140 bales. Futures closed steady;
sales to-day of 21,900 bales at the fol
lowing quotations: July 11.8811.90c;
August 11.7211.73c; September 10.86
10.87c; October 10.5810.59c; November
10.4510.46c; December 10.4510.46c;
January 10.5010.51c; February 10.55
10.56c; March 10.5810.59c.
Wheat spot irregular, moderately ac
tive and dull, closing stronger; No. 2 red
95 sc at elevator; options moderately ac
tive, HJkC up and steady; July o6c;
Auerust 94c; September 94Mc Corn
steady and moderately active; No.2, 43
43jc at elevatoroptions quiet and
weaker; July 43Jc; August 43c; Sep
tember 44c. Oats dull and unchanged;
options dull but steady; July 34c; Au
gust 34 c; September ZZc. Coffee
options closed firm and dull; July $17 00
17 05; August 16 7516 80; September
&16 20al6 30: spot Rio dull but steady;
fair cargoes 20c. Sugar.raw firm and quiet;
fair refining 4c; refined firm and fairly
active. Molasses foreign nominal; 50
test, 1834c. Fetroleum steady; crude in
bbls at Farters 87 40. Kosin strong
Soii-its turoentine hieher and auiet.
Wool about steady and quiet. Pork
moderately active and steady. Beef
quiet; beef hams steady; tierced beef
quiet and firm. Cut meats strong; mid
dles easy and quiet. Lard steady and
quiet; western steam $6 12; city steam
$5 60; July $6 08; August $6 126 14; Sep
tember $6 26. freights to Liverpoo
firm; cotton 3-32d.
Chicago, July 11. Cash quotations
are as follows: rlour ftrm and un
changed. Wheat No. 2 spring 87c; and
No. 2 red 88c. Corn No. 2, mc
Oats No. 2, 29c. Mess pork $11 87
Lard $5 77S5 80. Short rib sides
$5 055 10. Shoulders $5 205 25
Short clear sides $5 405 50, Whiskey
$1 09.
The leading futures ranged as follows
opening:, hiehest and closing;. Wheat
No. 2, July 87, 88, 87; Septem
ber 89, 90, 89. Corn No. 2. July
36V. 36M. 36U; September 37. 37
37. Oats No. 2, July 29, 29, 29; Sep
tember 2734. 28, 28. Mess pork per
bbl July $12, $12 20, $12; September
$11 15, $11 15, $11 09. Lard, per 100
fis July $5 77, $5 7 80, $5 77; Sep
tember $5 97 , $6 00. $6 00. briort
ribs per 100 lbs July $5 02. $5 05,
$5 05; September $5 22, $5 25, $5 22,
Baltimore, July 12. Flour fairly
active and firm. Wheat southern firm;
new 8398 tents; Fultz 9098 cents;
Longberry 9198 cents; western firm;
No. 2 winter red on spot 95 cents
Corn southern quiet: white 4850
cents; yellow 4849 cents; western easy
COTTON MARKETS.
By Telegraph to the Morning Star.
July 11. Galveston, nominal at HJc
net receipts 9 bales; Norfolk, steady
at llc net receipts 4 bales; Bal
timore, nominal at 12c net receipts
bales: Boston, quiet at 12c net
receipts bales; Philadelphia, steady
at 12c net receipts bales; Sa
vannah, steady at llc net receipts
8 bales; New Orleans, queit at 11 7-16c
net receipts 5 bales; Memphis, norm
nal at 11 c net receipts bales;
Mobile, nominal at lljc net receipts
8 bales; Augusta, nominal at , llc
net receipts 7 bales; Charleston, farm
at 1134c net receipts bales.
FOREIGN MARKETS.
By Cable to the Morning Star.
Liverpool, July 12, noon. Cotton
steady, but little doing; American mid
dling 6d. Sales 4,000 bales; for specu
lation and export 500 bales; receipts
7.000 bales, of which 2,300 were Ameri
can. Futures steady July and August de
livery 6 29-64d; August delivery 6 30
64d; August and September delivery
6 28-64d; September delivery 6 28-64d;
September and October delivery 5 61
64d, also 5 62-64d; October and Novem
ber delivery 5 52-64d, also 5 53-64d; No
vember and December delivery 5 54-64 d.
Wheat strong; demand poor; holders
offer sparingly; California No. 1 7s 3d
7s 4d; red western spring 7s 2d
7s 2 d? red western winter 7s7s ld.
Corn steady; demand fair.
Spirits turpentine 32s.
1 P. M. Cotton American middling
6d. Sales to-day included 3,300 bales
American. Futures: July 6 29-64d, buyer;
July and August 6 29-64d, buyer; Au
gust 6 80-646 31-64d; August and Sep
tember 6 28-646 29-64d; September
6 28-646 29-64d: September and Octo
ber 5 62-645 63-64d; October and No
vember 5 53-645 54-64d; November
and December 5 51-645 52-64d; De
cember and IJanuary 5 50-645 51-64d.
t utures closed farm.
Read advertisement ot Otterburn
T.ithia Wfltr in this oater. Uneaualed
for Dyspepsia and all diseases of kid
ney and bladder. Price within reach of
all. I
Is one which is guaranteed t0 k
?ailure areturnof purchase nn,?0
tnis saie pianyou can buy from " Utl
vfrtised Druggist a bottleof Dr T
tion? It is guaranteed to brinVS'P"
everv case, whpn i ieuelin
of Throat. I-: 7u dny. ecti,
etc., etc. It is pleasant an d agb?ft
taste, perfectly safe, and can nl , e!
depended upon. Lan always 1
inai Domes tree at Roehertp d
LAMY's Wholesale and R.,.;,Bel-
Store. lJrug
NOTHING SUCCEEDS
LIKE SUCCESS.
The reason RADAM's
MICROEE,LLERistht
most wonderful
because it has never faicdij
any instance, no matir v
the disease, from LFpfincS
to the simplest diseat fUSY
to the human sys)eT '
The scientific men of irwi
claim and prove that
disease is ' everJ
CAUSED -BY MICROBES
AND
liiicimmaics mc miuruocs ana anves them out of tht
system, and when that is done you cannot have
ache or pain. No matter what the disease wheih
: . . 1 1 1 1
simple case 01 malaria rever or a combination f djs
eases, we cure them all at the same time, as we treat a!
diseases constitutionally.
Asthma, Consumption, Catarrb,Broii.
chitis, Rheumatism, Kidney and
Liver Disease, Chill and Fever, Fe.
male Troubles, In all 11m form, and,
in fact, every Disease know n to the
Human System.
Beware of Fraudulent Imitations!
C .1 . T .1 . ,i ,
ui uui iiauc-nijii, (Mint as aDove) appear
on each jug.
Send for book "History of the Microbe Killtr,'
given away by
R. R. r.KLI.AMY,
Druggist, Wilmington, N. C.
Sole A cent.
jan 11 D&W ly nrrn su 111 ill
THE ECONOMIC,
THE BEST LOW PKICED
PAPER CUTTER
IN THE MARKET
This Machine is designed to meet the demand of
Printers who want a Good Taper Cutter at a Low
Price 1
IT"lS VERY SIMPLE IN CONSTRlCVani
yet it is POWERFUL, STRONG, and as well bunts
any higher-priced cutter. r.very mai i h
l'RlCES-24-inch, $1 15.00 ;)-indi, S1--0 .00 ; tMnck.
1 175.00. Boxed and shipped r ree ot rnaryr.
T. V. fc V. C. ST! LI-MAN,
jan It tf Manufacturers, Westerly, K. I.
GOLD MEDAUPARIS.
vH W. KAICER & co:s
lladlriiaffiisl Capa
$343 Is abaoUitcl'j rrc t--
No Chcvuctn
- . In It. nrensratiun It
than Ihret timn the '
mixed with Starch, Arr.w" t
and i therefore fur "
r.rtnp I an rnc '""
delicious, nourishing, "
en. 1KOKSTED. Mill H'!""r"'"
for invalids well P' "-1"3 '
Said bT Grown t-verj v.t.
W. BhSEB, & CO Dorchester,
dec 1 D&W9rn
we lr su
CALL
John L Boatwri
15 & 17 South Front Street,
7
OR THE ONLY FIRST CLASS CROC
ERIES
F
that can be prv.r-ired in the citv.
please the Retail Trade. Call and examine my
l- stoct
"Parole D'Honor Flour,
conceded the best ever brotiKht to this market. '
not enamerate the articles I have for sale,
1 -sire
serve my customers with anything they 1 "
-tl.i t price' Su,r
call and examine my goods. 1 nc 1.
an teed.
JOHN L. BOATWBIGBT.
my 9 tf
Open Day and 0
H&y Saloon
ORNER OF WOK 111
berry
etreets, is open from 1 o'clock a. m.
until
11.45 p. m. Satnrday.
CHAS. F. BROWN, Agent,
. i7;im!ncrto0 '
mar 9 D&W tf
iyrM Tao PatsoU S
HUD. J VV - ,,T
TJEMEDY AND A FULL STOCK ur
K. A-A;r,a Toilet Articles and J rc
Chemicals can always "er-S , 1
.- 1, i Fourth and r""-
P. S.-Prescriptions filled day and night.
. ' ' o ' "csi, such nc r
sumption. Inflammation of Luntrs p
chitis, Xethrria. Whoor,; r' Pfon.
glit's,