Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Aug. 28, 1890, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBUSHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. THE MORNING STAR, the oldest daily news- paper in ionn ""J""". " , fcn Mondav, at $6 00 per year, $3 00 few six months $1 80 . " . i Wnnc mnntn to mail Sllb- scribcrs. Delivered to city subscribers at the rate of 12 cents per week for any period from one week to one year. ryTP WPOrT V CPA T? la fnH1ie)lfl AWTV FridftV morning at $1 00 per year. 60 cents for sue months, 30 rents for three months. ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One square nr,,. Anv 1 00 two da vs. $1 75 : three days, $2 50 ; four days, $3 00; five days, $3 50; one week, $4 00; two weeks, $8 50; three weeks, $8 50; one month. S10 00 ; two montns, 1 w ; tnree montnsjjts' uu ; months, $40 00 ; twelve months, $60 00. Ten lines of solid Nonpareil type mase one square. All announcements ot fairs, festivals, ram, "-'K", Pi-mV Wictv Meetinirs. Pohtical Meetings, &c, will . .. . . . i ,-,! T T . be charged regular advertising races. 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Contract advertisers will not be allowed to exceed their space or advertise anything toreign to tneir regu- ar business without extra cnarge at transient rates. lvCl!ULUtUV 1 ; I L. o L i. i . n n . J ...... , - .Money Order, Express or in Registered Letter. Only sucn remittances win uc ul luc iisb. .i mc juuiuu. Advertisers should always specify the issue or issues they desire to advertise in. Where no issue is named the advertisement will be inserted in the Daily. Where an advertiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him during the time his advertisement is in the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his address. Uy WI1LIA9I II. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, N. C. Thursday Morning, Aug. 28, 1890. BEMOCHATIC NOMINATIONS. For Congress, Sixth District : SYDENHAM B. ALEXANDER, of Mecklenburg. fOI NTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For House Representatives : GEO. L. MORTON, M. J. CORBETT. For Sheriff : FRANK H. STEDMAN, For Clerk Superior Court : JOHN D. TAYLOR. For Register Deeds : JOHN HAAR, Jr. For Treasurer: JOHN L. DUDLEY. For Surveyor : M. P. TAYLOR. For Const ablks Vviimington J. W. MILLIS. Cape Fear J. T. KERR. ! iisonboro JOHN M ELTON. Hiraert W. H. STOKLEY. 'c -ciY Point T. DAVE SOUTH ERL AND. Fos Coroner : JOHN WALTON. THEY'LL GET USED TO IT. The toleration the people have shown for the Republican party has emboldened the leaders to undertake any thing and do any thing, believ ing that the people will stand it, as they have stood so much already. If they did not presume on the patience of the people they would not dare to go one-tenth as far as they have gone, nor to show the utter indiffer ence to popular complaint that they have shown. A few days ago Senator Plumb, in pleading for a reduction of tariff tax ation quoted a high tariff Congress man as saying nonchalantly, that although the people might be rest ive under the increased taxes im posed by the bill now under discus sion, that they would soon "get used to it," and bear it as patiently as they had borne all the preceding increases. This is the principle upon which these high tariff tools of trusts, syn dicates, and protected monopolies have been acting all along. The people will "get used to it," will stand it, therefore pile it on. They may be a little restive at first when it begins to hurt, but they will "get used to it," and in the meantime they will palaver them, humbug them, lie to them and make them believe it is all right. They act on the presump tion that the people haven't intelli gence enough to know good from evil in matters of this kind and that therefore there will be no difficulty in persuading them that the evil is good. Unfortunately the experience of the past quarter ot a century has given too much ground for the pre sumption. There are a good many people, it is true, who do not realize the fact that under the tariff system they are taxed heavily, because they pay the tax indirectly to the manufacturer in the price of the article which they ' buy and the payment is made in such small sums generally, that they do not feel it or realize it at the time. A man buys a hammer, for instance, for fifty or seventy-five cents, and does not think that while he is pay ing for the hammer he is paying the tax at the same time. But when the aggregate for the year on all the ar ticles bought is footed up, it amounts in round figures to about ten dollars for every man, woman and child in the United States. A man with five in family would pay a tribute of $50 a year to the protected manufac turers, for which he don't receive a red cent of benefit. Unfortunately, too, this species of taxation always weighs heaviest on those who are least able to bear it, and not only keeps the poor poor, but makes them poorer. - The man of wealth can always live propor tionately more cheaply than the poor man, for he buys what he needs in large quantities and therefore gets the benefit of the lower price on ac count of the larger purchase, while the poor man who can only afford to buy in small quantities is compelled to pay the highest price. He there fore pays the highest tribute on ev erything he buys; on the implements he labors with, the clothing he wears, on the necessaries of life and the little luxuries, if he can ever venture upon luxuries. This is where the grinding ine quality, injustice and oppression of this species of taxation comes in, and this is what makes it odious and damnable. Is it a wonder that with a head tax of ten dollars each, (and this is a very moderate estimate, for the poor man pays much more if he be the head of a family), the farmers of this country are kept with their faces on the grind stone, and the toiling millions have to struggle for exis tence, living from hand to mouth and straining all their economies to make both ends meet? Take a farmer, for instance, with five in family. His proportion of the tribute levied for protection would be fifty dollars. Those fifty dollars must come out of the products of his farm which are in excess of the home de mand and the prices of which conse quently range very low. It costs the Western farmer fifty cents a bushel to raise his wheat and put it in the bins ready for market. Wheat sold in the West until recently at about sixty cents a bushel, so that it would take the profits on 500 bushels of wheat to, pay his proportion of the protec tive tax, and twice or three times as much oats or corn. So with the me chanic, laborer, or other toiler. This tribute comes out of his daily labor, Is it any wonder that the farmer has been made poor and is kept struggling with his debts, and that the toiler lives from hand to mouth and finds himself at the end of the year no better off, if not worse off, than at the beginning, though he has worked faithfully, hard and econo mised as much as he could' There is nothing surprising in it, and it will always be so while the Republican statesmen think the people will "get used to it" and stand it, or until the people rise and hurl them from power and put in their places men who have more regard for justice some sense of fair play and some consideration for the toiling millions of their fellow citizens, men who will look to the interests of the people and not to the monopolies which feed like vampires on the substance of the people. MINOR MENTION. They had a regular circus in the House of Representatives Tuesday over the Conger Lard bill, the whole day being consumed in vainly en deavoring to get a vote on it. The bill came to a vote last Saturday, but before it was finally disposed of the House had to adjourn for want of a quorum, the quorum being broken by members absenting them selves for that especial purpose. Tuesday it was claimed by the friends of the bill that it came up in the regular order as unfinished busi ness, which was denied by the other side, who contended that under the rules of the House it had con sumed the time allotted to it, and must take its place in the rear. After a war of words and citing con flicting decisions pro and con., the Speaker pro tern., Mr. Payson, of Illi nois, (a hog lard man), ruled that it was in order and had the right of way. Mr. Cannon, of Illinois, (an other; hog lardj man), introduced a resolution reciting that members (giving their names) absented them selves from the hall for the purpose of breaking a quorum, and calling for a rescinding of all leaves of absence except in cases of sickness. This opened the ball, the members who were named protesting against the preamble citing their names, and the circus then proceeded until 5.45 p. m., when the House had to adjourn for want of a quorum, mem bers remaining in the House long enough to answer roll call and then skipping out. It was the first gen uine filibuster performance they have had since the new rules were adopt ed. It was not a Democratic filibus ter, but was participated in by both Democrats and Republicans who are opposed to the passage of the Conger bill, from which it seems that the new rules don't work in apple pie order to prevent Republi cans from filibustering, and to make a quorum dead sure. The understanding between the friends and opponents of the Senate tariff bills fixes the date, September 8th, on. which the vote is to be taken. The arrangement seems to have been satisfactory to all save Senator Plumb, who was in favor of closing the debate only when the bill was thoroughly discussed and sifted. But there was no good reason why the debate should be protracted in definitely, as the Democrats were, even with Mr. Plumb's zealous co operation, unable to secure the adop tion of a single amendment and all they could hope to do was to expose the inconsistencies, injustice, and hypocrisy of this bill, which they have already effectively done in their masterly handling of the debate. It was decided in caucus that the bill should pass practically in its present shape, and so it will pass whether the vote be taken on the 8th of Sep tember or later. The Democrats could not afford to put themselves in the position of destructionists merely, and they did their full duty in labor ing faithfully to amend the bill and lessen some of the burdens it imposes upon the people. They have not succeeded in doing this because the Republican caucus had decreed that no amendments should be passed save those recommended by the com mittee which had the bill in charge, and hence every amendment offered by the Democrats was voted down by "the usual party vote." -ic Senator Butler, of South Carolina, has gone down to act as a peace maker between the contending Till man and anti-Tillman factions in that State and see if some plan can't be devised by which they may be brought together. It is said that matters have assumed such a threat ening shape that many of the best friends of the State are very appre hensive of the result. Senator But ler has been sent because he has not become entangled in the contention, and it is thought there will be more of a disposition on both sides to lis ten to and accept suggestions from him on account of his non-committed attitude. Perhaps the fact that the Republicans have decided to take advantage of these dissensions and put several candidates for Con gress in the field, backed by money from the North, may induce the wrangling Democrats to listen to reason and come together before it is too late. If through their obsti nacy these contentions should con tinue to the end and disaster come they will have themselves to blame for it and have a long time to medi tate over and lament their folly. But we have too much confidence in their love of State and good sense to believe it will go that far. STATE TOPICS. Judging from the proceedings of the colored convention held at Ra leigh Tuesday, the politicians got in their work, sailed into the Demo cratic party, endorsed the adminis tration, favored the Blair bill and the Force bill, denounced several things and demanded political re cognition. The presumption is that they demanded it from the Republi can party. They should also have demanded it from Mr. Harrison's ad ministration which they endorsed, for Mr. Harrison has sat down upon the negro quite as heavily as white bosses in this State have done. The fact that they passed a resolution in favor of the force bill is an indica tion that sinister influences domina-. ted in that convention. That bill, if it were a law to-day, would do the negro immensely more harm than good. The men who favored that resolution had not the good of the race in view, and are not the kind of counsellors and leaders the negroes want. CURRENT COMMENT President Arthur once re marked (concerning the River and Harbor Appropriation) that "the worse the bill the more friends it has;" but the neat way in which the Force bill has been hamstrung shows that this does not always hold good. Phil. Ledger, Ind. It is said that the Emperor William is a voracious newspaper reader. He alwavs reads with scis sors at hand, so that he can cliD anv items that haDDen to strike his fan cy. If a Socialistic revolution should, drive him out of the monarch v busi ness, he might, perhaps, get a job as an exchange editor. N. Y. Star JJem. The " postponement of. the Force bill until- December "should not make the Democracy too confi dene. The Republicans count upon electing Senators from the new States of Idaho and Wyoming, and with four additional votes their pros pects of having in the next session the forty-lhree votes necessary to change the rules and set up a gag -are not hopeless. Y. N. Sun, Dem. Edison's latest idea is to utilize the mass of magnetic iron ore, a mile in length, at Ogden, N. J., as a means of measuring every change in the strength of solar dis turbances; and he thinks that by use of the telephone all sounds produced on the sun would be heard on our planet. It is a daring idea, appeal ing strongly to the imagination; yet : who shall say that the dream of to ' day may not be destined to have a veritable fulfillment, with practical results of inconceivable value to mankind! Phil. Record, Dem. GREAT BRITAIN. Faots and Figures About Her Cotton Industry. From a late report of Consul Gun nell, of Bradford, England, we learn that the number of spindles in Great Britain is given at 45,000,000, and at the ordinary computation of 1 ($4.80) per spindle there is repre sented $218,992,500 of capital. The number of looms in Great Britain is over. 400,000. The total sum invest ed in mills and machinery in spin nin and manufacturing is over $486, G50.000. The vearlv amount of wages paid is $136,262,000, and the number of operatives engaged is $1, 200,000 ($113 55 per operative per annum.) In Oldham, eight miles distant from Manchester, is the great spinning centre, arid this posi tion has been secured by the devel opment of co-operation on the lim ited liability principle. Blackburn, twenty-four and a half miles distant, has been the great weaving centre of Lancashire, but is now being ap proached, in the magnitude of its manufactures, by Burnley, twenty- eight miles distant. In Blackburn there are 65,000 looms; next is Burn ley, with 57,000; followed by Pres ton, with 38,000; Nelson, with 28,000; Oldham, with 18,000, and Accnng ton, with 13,000. The year, save during the slight disturbance caused by the attempted cotton corner at Liverpool in earlv autumn, has been a fairly satisfactory one. In regard to the supply ot American cotton, it is stated that "during the past six or seven years the increase of produc tion of cotton has not kept pace with the increasing capacity of the world's spindles to absorb it. RIOT IN WEST VIRGINIA. A Floating Threatre Wrecked and the Actors Thrown Overboard. Huntington, W. Va., Aug. 24. There was a serious and bloody not at a performance given by the "Sunny South Theatrical Company at Coredo Friday night, particulars which have just been received. One man was shot and over a dozen more badly beaten, while the floating theatre in which the trouble occurred was badly wrecked. The trouble was inaugurated by a number of tough young men who insulted the people upon the stage during the second act. Three of the per formers left the stage with clubs and attacked their tormenters. The men were at once overpowered by the au dience and cruelly beaten. The re mainder of the company went to their assistance when some one turned out the lights. Pandemonium broke loose at once and every man began an onslaught on his neighbor in the dark, while women screamed and men called for help. The police ar rived and deputized a number of cit izens to aid in quelling the riot, but this only made matters worse, and soon revolver shots began to echo around the hall. Finally the crowd charged on the stage after the flee ing performers, who were unceremo niously flung into the river, where they were stoned in the darkness. Every one of the police and the show people were badly wounded by stones, and the condition of several is serious. THE GLOW WORM. Where It Gets its Light a Puzzle. London Daily News. One of our readers in Wales, to whom the glow worm is not so fa miliar as it is to our country sub scribers nearer home, wants to know something about the, food of that curious creature, and the light emit ted by it. He says: "There is a poem in which it is said that glow worms are as numerous as the stars, but I doubt if one person in a hun dsep has ever seen one. I have kept one in a glass for a week, supply ing it with grass and leaves, which however, it does not appear to touch. It gives a bright light sufficient to tell the time by, for about two hours every night, being punctual almost to a minute, both in lighting and putting out its lamps." The glow worm in its larval state lives on snails and slugs, and becomes vege tarian only in its perfect state. Its light is an example of animal phos-r phoresence, upon which of late years there has been no lack of scientific theory. Its light has been happily named a love light by one of its closest students, whose account of the Italian firefly's flirtations by means of her attractive phosphores ence our correspondent would find highly entertaining. Politicians are a good deal like shoes. You can't expect the machine-made ones to be of the highest grade. Puck. PERSONAL. Col. Tom Ochiltree is 54 years of age. The colonefs red hair is a great boon-to him, in hiding his years. - ' Patrick Harris, the theatrical manager, died suddenly a few days ago at Bay Shore, L. I., where he had gone for rest and recuperation. Herr Krupp, the great gun manufacturer, has a plan for connecting the City of Vienna with the Danube by canal. The Austrian government is considering it. - Col. Zilimboff of the Russian army, now stationed in Siberia, claims to have discovered in ordinary eggs an oil by which he can greatly increase th force of explosives. A little girl who recently visited Dr. Holmes with her tatner, a tsoscon editor, so pleased the "Autocrat" by re rifinrr "Thp flnp Hnrse Shav" that he wrote out the final lines and handed them to her with his autograph ap pended. Margaret Solomon, whose maiden name was Gray Eyes, the last of the Wyandottes, has just died near TTnnr Sanduskv. This outs an end to the picturesque Indians whom Cooper r .. , 1 1 -11 C 1.. descriDea in nis innuing stones ui cany American lite. William Black is about to start on a yachting cruise to the Levant and the Crimea, and he will also visit Tan- oier. Svracuse. Constantinople. Sebasto- pol, Balaklava and Malta in order to get material and local coloring lor tne novel on which he is engaged. Harriet Hosmer, who is to have statue of Queen Isabella at the Colum hian exhibition in Chicago, is about to rlenart for London, where she hopes to pick up in the British Museum some ideas aDOut the correct costuming oi the figure. Miss Hosmer expects to return to Chicago with a wax model of the statue next winter. POLITICAL POINTS. Congress ought not to hurry the McKinley bill through. Day by day facts are upsetting its specious theories, and if it could remain -unacted on a year or two there would not be a shred left of that part of it designed "to protect the farmer. Chicago Irtvune, Rep. Mr. Carter, of Montana, suc ceeds Mr. Belden as Secretary and Gen eral Manager of the Republican Con gressional Campaign Committee. Mr. Carter, it is understood, will not commit the folly of attempting to edit all the Republican newspapers in the United btates. bt. Faiil Fionecr Press, Rsp. Ihe argument that Ouay is using with most effect in the Senate to push the McKinley bill through is that if the measure is postponed they will never have another chance to push it. He realizes that the Lower House of the next Congress will be organized in oppo sition to the warkaxes. Quay is good at deciphering the handwriting on the wall. bt. Paul Globe. Dem. Sparkling Catawba Springs, CATAWBA COUNTY, IT. C. Dr. E. O. Elliott & Son, PROPRIETORS. rpHlS WELL KNOWN RESORT IS SEVEN X miles from Hickory, over a beautiful road. Capacity 500 guests, with superior Medicinal Min eral waters lor tne liver, JJyspepsia, Kheumatism, Kidney Disecses. Debility and Nervous Prostration. A fine dry climate, a delightful home, the very place to restore the invalid to health and enjoyment of f:r ti i . . i i, ttj inc. in snaue oi me uiue i-uage. For Catalogue address the Proprietors. June 30, 1890. CARD FROM SENATOR VANCE. United States Senate, Washington, D. Cm, February 7th, 1SS5. I take great pleasure in sayinz that I am well ac quainted with the waters of the Sparkling Catawba Springs. I consider them of the greatest value, hav ing witnessed their effects upon many of my acquaint ances for the last fifteen years. Situated as they are in the midst of a beautiful rolling country, entirely above the malarial belt. I know of no place in our suite more desirable tor the health-seeker. Yours very truly, Z. D. VANCE. Office of Wittkowsky & Baruch, Charlotte, M. C, March 2, Dr. E. O. Elliott. Dear Sir: I have visited a treat manv Sm-incrs in jhis country and in Europe, among others the "Sara toga" of this country, and the celebrated "Karlsbad" Springs in Europe and am free to say that I find the sparkling Catawba to excel, in their curative pro perties, all of them. And so far as I am nersonallv concerned, I always look forward with pleasure to the time wnen 1 can spena a tew pleasant days at those Springs. Yery respectfully. S. WITTKOWSKY. Charlotte, N. C, February 2J, 1S85. The subscriber has been for many years acquainted with the beneficial effects resulting from the use of the spanning tatawoa spring water, it restores the lost appetite, reguiates the action of the bowels and kid neys, clearing the skin, and removing eruptions (usually Deneittca Dy sulphur or arsenic;, By its use the pa tient gains weight, strength and spirits. I have not seen more general beneficial results from the use of any other mineral water with which I am acquainted. jyiUwtt J. JJ. JONES, M. L. Island Beach Hotel! J. A. BROWN, Manager. TTAVING LEASED THE ABOVE NAMED J.JL Hotel, situated at the Hammocks, I am prepared to cater successfully to the wants of the public. The tables will be sumilied with the choicest viands ot tne season. Many places of ereat interest in the vicinitv. Surf Bathing, Bath Houses in still water, fine boating facilities, unrivalled fishinsr. and above all an unex celled cuisine. Cottages on the Beach connected with the Hotel. Prof. Miller's Celebrated Band engaged for the season. OPEN MAY 13TII, 1890. J. A. BROWN, MANAGER. my 11 tf ORKNEY SPRINGS, SHENANDOAH CO., VA. gUMMER RESORT FOR HEALTH AND Pleasure. The finest climate in the mountains of the Virginias. Climate very salubrious and free from fogs. Average mean temuerature very low during the entire summer months. The large number of different Springs owned and controlled by the Comoanv. makes it the nonnlnr re sort of all this highly favored section of the United states. Pure spring water, perfect drainaee. Dure milk, nn: excelled cuisine, billiard rooms for ladies and gentle men, bowline alley, tennis courts, largest Swimming Pool in the virmnias. etc. Good liverv. v1lon orchestra in attendance during the summer. Hotel .rroperty j,uuu acres in extent, embracing some of the finest mountain scenery in the country. r or cucuiars ana terms aoaress my 203m tu th sa F. W. EVANS, Manager. The Hewlett House. TRIGHTSVILLE 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. COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MARKET. - J-i STAR OFFICE, August 27. SPIRITS TURPENTINE. Dull at 38 cents per gallon. No sales. ROSIN-Market steady at 90 cents per bbl. for Strained and ,95 cts for Good Strained. ,- TAR. Firm at $1 65 per bbh of 280 Bbs., with sales at quotations CRUDER TURPENTINE Distillers quote the market firm at $2 10 for Vir igin, $2 10 for Yellow Dip and $1 25 for Hard. ' COTTON Quiet with sales at 10 cents for Middling. Quotations at the Produce Exchange were Ordinary 1 cts. lb Good Ordinary 9 1-1G " ' Low Middling 10 " Middling.; 10 " ' Good Middling 10 " ' RECEIPTS. Cotton Spirits Turpentine. Rosin Tar Crude Turpentine. 89 bales 190 casks 951 bbls 54 bbls 24 bbls DOMESTIC MARKETS. LBy Telegraph to the Morning Star. Financial. New York, Aug. 27. Evening Sterling exchange quiet and barely steady at 483486J. Money easy at 36 per cent. Government securities dull but steady; four per cents 125; four and a half per cents 105. State ! A ! ,1.-11 ,:.l -..- XT.4-Vt SCUurillCs uuu whuuui icaiuic, nuim larolina sixes io; lours-TJY. Commercial. New York, Aug. 27. Evening.- Cotton easy; sales to-day 370 bales; middling uplands lljc; middling Or leans 11 5-1 6c; net receipts to-day at all U. S. ports 4,577 bales; exports to Great Britain 645 bales; exports to v ranee bales; exports to the Continent 133 bales; stock at all U. b. ports 09,515 bales. Cotton Net receipts bales; gross receipts 1,446 bales. Futures closed steady; sales of 58,000 bales at the fol lowing quotations: August 10.7610.78c; September 10.7210.73c; October 10.51 &10.52c; Noember 10.42 10.43c; De cember 10.4110.42c; January 10.45 10.46c; February 10.5010.51c; March 10.5210.53c; April 10.5710.59c. Southern flour dull and unchanged. Wheat unsettled and dull; No. 2 red $1 Q81 09 at elevator; options closed weak on realizing; No. 2 red August $1, 08; September $1 08; October 1 09; November $1 10; May $1 14. Corn irregular, closing lower and mod erately active; No. 2, 5555c at elevator; options weak and lower; Au gust 55c; October 55Jc; November 56c; May 58c. Oats spot weak and fairly active; options quiet and weaker; August 41)ec; September 41c; October 40c; No. 2 spot 4142c. Hops steady and quiet; State 2228c. Coffee options closed steady; August $18 20 18 30; beptember $17 7017 75; Oc tober $17 1017 20; spot Rio firm and quiet; fair cargoes 20c. Sugar raw firm, c advance asked and quiet; fair refining 5c bid; centrifugals, 96 test, 5c bid; refined quiet and firm; C 54c: ex tra C 5 3-165c; standard A 6Jc; confectioners A 5 15-16c; granulated 6 3-16c. Molasses toreign nominal; New Orleans firm and quiet. Kice in good demand and firm; domestic fair to extra 5J47mc. Petroleum steady. Rosin quiet and steady. Spirits turpentine quiet and steady at 40-M. 41)c. " Wool steady and quiet. Pork active and steady; mess S12 2o13 00. Beef firm and dull; beef hams quiet and firm; tierced beef dull and firm. Cut meats firm and active; middles quiet and firm. .Lard lower and dull; western steam $6 50; city steara $G 00; Septem ber $6 48 bid; October $6 646 65. freights firm; cotton 7-64d. Chicago, Aug. 27. Cash quotations as follows: Flour steady. Wheat No. 2 spring and No. 2 red SI 05. Corn No. 2, 48Jc. Oats No. 2, 37 37 Mc. Mess pork 11 00. Lard $6 20. Short rib sides $5 255 35. Shoulders $5 755 87K- Short clear $5 705 75. Whiskey $1 13. The leading futures ranged as follows opening, highest and closing. Wheat no. 2, August and beptember SI 08, 1 08U, 1 07M; December $1 09M. 1 10, 1 01. Corn No. 2, August 49, 49, 48ic; September 49 J, 4914, 48c; May 6?. 533, 51c. Oats No. 2, August 37c; May 39, '3(J, 39c. Mess pork per bbl beptember $10 75, 1U 75, lu 75; January $12 60, 12 60, 12 47. Lard, per 100 lbs September $6 27, 6 27, 6 22; January $6 87. 6 87, 6 82. Short ribs, per 100 Bbs Septem- per sga 35, 5 35, 5 2714: January SS5 95. 5 95. S 87. Baltimore, August 27- Flour steady. Wheat southern firm: Fultz 95c$l 05; Longberry 81 001 05; western weak and lower: No. 2 winter red on spot and August si U3. Corn southern steady: white 5859 cents; yellow 57 58 cents; western firm. COTTON MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Ausr. 27. Galveston, easv at lOUr net receipts 1.705 bales, all new r'ron: Norfolk, steady at 10c net receipts jd Daies, an new crop; Baltimore, nomi nal at lljc net receipts bales: Bos ton, auiet and weaker at 11 3-16c net re- . ' i ceipts bales; Philadelphia, quiet at nfcc "ei receipts Daies; oavannan, stead v at 10 Ac net receipts 1.854 bales. all new crop; New Orleans, easy at iuc net receipts 570 bales, includ ing 40 bales newcrop; Mobile, auiet at 10c net receipts 08 bales, includ ing 65 bales new crop; Memphis, nomi- nai at uc net receints na es: Au gusta, steady at lOJc net receipts 201 bales: Charleston firmer at lQii net receipts 358 Dales, all new crop. FOREIGN MARKETS. By Cable to the Morning Star. Liverpool, August 27, noon. Cot ton steady though somewhat inactive: American middling 6Md. Sales 7.000 bales; for speculation and export 400 bales. Receipts 2,500 bales, all of which were American. Futures quiet but steadv: Aufrust de livery 6 9-64&6 8-64d: August and Ser- tember delivery 6 6-64, 6 5-64, 6 6-64, 6 7-646 6-64d; September delivery 6 6 64d; September and October delivery 5 53-64. 5 54-64, 5 55-645 54-64d; Oc tober and November delivery 5 49-64 5 48-64d; Noyember and December de livery 5 47-64(S5 48-64df December and January delivery 5 46-64 5 47-64d; Jan uary ana February delivery 5 46-64d, Tenders of cotton to-dnv n -nnT new and 500 bales old docSt ba,es o r w a X . 1V1. rtmpriran : i ... ling CWfj. can. ' """"" w.iwi bales Am7 Wheat firm; demand offer sparinp-Jv. poor; liol((rs corn nrm; demand improving ' AugustO 8-64G .)-C4d- gust and September 6 0-G4d. buvc 4 " tember and October 5 53-G4d buvor T ;tober and November 5 48-04,1 1 C" November and Decenbcr 5 47 r,4fi ,ycr; er; December and January 5 40-04,1 1 y er; January and February 5 40-04,1 1 y" er; February ard March 5 47-04,4 h y" : Futures c'osed firm ' 1Uycr' I C onsiimpilon Iiuiirable? Read the following : Mr C M f 1 ris, Newark. Ark., 'says: '"Was'il with Abscess of Lungs, and friends '2 physicians pronounced mc an Incunhl Consumptive. Began taking Dr Kin ' New Discovery for Gonsunipti',)n now on my third bottle, and able T oversee the work on my farm. U ;s ., finest medicine ever made." Jesse Middleware Decatur says: "Had it not been for Dr Kin' '' New Discovery for Consurnption I WfJjf5 have died of Lung Troubles. Was nVo 'up by doctors. Am now in best of health." Try it. Sample bottles free Robert R. Bellamy's Wholesale n,l Retail Drugstore. NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS. The rcasun i v MICROKK Kll..i:i;1 ,L most wonderful ini-dii i.j,. because it has never f.,,;, ; any instance, no in:m.T ', . the disease, from I.K'Kisv to the simplest disease l.n to the human sysiem. The scientific men . f ,v claim and prove th;.; n,,, disease is CAUSED BY MICROBES, AND .Radam's Microbe Killer. Exterminates the Microbes and cinvrs their, ent i. system, and when that is done you cannot luv. ,. ache or pain. Nt matter what the disease, v.-,, illc r simple case of Malaria Fever or a combinatio:) i, eases, we cure them all at the same time, as i.. . diseases constitutionally A s( at let ft., CoiiHiimiUoti, Cm art i, SCi .(. cEtiliK, EIieaii:iafim, i-Jiiey ;mI Liver Diftjcaae, Chills :;m! fever, uiale Xronltles, iit nil Jit- iortiis, nd, in fact, every ISsoanc knov. i to eiir III man SjXf in. Beware of Fraudulent Imitations! See that our Trade-Mark (-r,me as a! e) a pi .u on each jug. Send for boo' "History of the Micr.'U- Kiil. . given away by U. R. LCI. i.AM'i , Druggist, Wilmington, N. C. Sole Akpiii. jan 11 D&W ly runi su ui th PATPFTAlff W ! Dongas Phoes arn Ui&U 1 lull warranted, nml every pnir has his name and price stamped on linttmi:, W. L DOUGLAS 40 OrlC GENTLEMEN. Fine Calf and Laced Waterproof (Jrnin. The excellence and wparlnc- mialitipsof this filioo cannot be better shown than ly the strons endorse ments ot Its thousands of constant wearers. SBiOO Genuine Iland-aewcd, an elegant my) stylish dress Shoe which commends itself. Hand-sewed Welt. A Ann cm SO. SO Goodyear Welt Is the standard drr." unequalled for stylo and durability. $3 9 bhoe, at a popular price. .GO Policeman's Shoe Is especially adapted for railroad men, farmers, etc. All made in Congress, Button and Lace. $3&$SSHOES lafd.Is, haTe been most favorably received since introduced and the recent improvements mako them superior to any shoes sold at theso prices. Ask your Dealer, and If he cannot supply you wni direct to factory enclosing advertised price, or a postal foi order blanks. vv . 1,. uuuujLiAS, Jirocuion, itui-.. 11. VON Cl.AHN jan 11 Cm sa tu th HMffl OR PILES, SICK HEADACHE, DUMB AGUE. COS TIVE BO WEILS, SOUK. STOMACH nl BELCHING tit your food does not ' imitate and you bave no appetite, will core these troubles. Try themj you have nothing to lose, bnt will cat a vigorous body. lrico, 5c. per box. SOLU EVJ2RYWHEKE, jan 21 D&Wlv tu th sat nrm Or the IJuuor Ilahit, Poaitivelr Curcu by adminiaterinx Dr. Maine' Gulden Specific. . ,,, ,,, it fun hi i.;voii iii ft nr f viffYw nr tPft. or III tleUs of food, without the knowledge of the patient. U Is absolutely harmless, and will elleot a lrl'" Oni and speedy cure, whether the patient is moderate drinker or anj alcoholic wreck. 1 NEVER FAILS. Over 100.000 drunkards hJ pacific in their cofleo without their knpwledfc fJtd to-day believe tber quit drinking of their own tZ will. 48 page book of particulars free. JOHN H. HARDIN, Druggist,, sa tu th Wilmington, M , my 17 D&Wly IFor LOST or FAXLXJiu S3ttttv Weakness of uoay ana fl. lf TZrmr nr Excesses in Old or T ounp. ttobiMt, Koble BA.MIOOD rally "KnTant ( Strengthen WEAK, BNDKVKM)PEDORCIAll8A PABT80F AbMlotely f.lllnS HOB J5"TBJ. Writ. DCTCTipti Book, eTplan.tlon Hh K'lj y. addraM ERIE MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO. N. febl3D&W tutbsat lOII! II H i 'f i cured at home witu iF II B U MUI out pain. Book of par IT El HI Eva ticulars sent JFJU-f- FAtlamte,a. Office 104 Whitehall tit. feb 13 D&Wlv tu th sat ins-
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 28, 1890, edition 1
2
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