BEBNABD.
WILMINGTON, N. C.
Thursday MorningOct. 23, 1890.
DSnOCBATIO NOMINATIONS.
Fot Congkkss. Sixth District :
SYDENHAM B. ALEXANDER, of Mecklenburg.
Fob Justicks or the Supbkmk Coukt:
Chief lustice-A. S. Mbmimom, of
Associate Justice Waltm Clak, ot Wale.
For Superior Court Judges :
1st District Geo. H. Brown, Jk of Beaufort.
2nd District Hk-sky R. Bryan, of Craven.
4th District Sfibr WiaTAKKK,of Wake.
5th District-R. W. Winston, of Granville.
6th District E. T. Bovktn. of Sampson.
7ih District Jambs D. McIvkr, of Moore,
gth District R. F. A km field, of Iredell.
10th District Jno. Gray Byxum, of Burke.
11th District W. A. Hokk, of Lincoln.
Fob Solicitor:
6th District-O. H. ALLEN, of Lenoir.
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
For State Senate:
Nrw Hanover and Pender
JOHN D. BELLAMY, Jr.
For House Reprbsbntati v ks
GEO. L. MORTON,
J. T. KERR
For Sheriff :
FRANK H. STEDMAN,
For Cxerk Superior Court :
JOHN D. TAYLOR.
For Register Deeds:
JOHN HAAR, Jr.
For l REASUKKs :
JOHN L. DUDLEY
Fob Surveyor :
M. P. TAYLOR
For Constables
WtLmmgtuo J. W. MILLIS.
Cape Fear M. G. CHADWICK.
Masonboro JOHN MELTON.
Harnett W. H. STOKLEY.
Federa Poial-T. DAVE SOUTHERLAND.
Fob Corovex:
IOHN WALTON.
THE BALLOT.
The distinguishing difference be
tween the Democracy and other forms
of government is that in the De
mocracy, the people are, or are sup
posed to be, the sovereign source of
power, and through delegated repre
sentatives provided for in the scheme
of government, govern themselves.
With the ballot they choose the rep
resentatives and the officers who are
to make and administer the laws.
When the ballot is wielded with
judgment, intelligence and consci
ence then, as a rule, competent, good
men will be chosen, and the govern
ment will be honestly and justly
conducted. It is only when this
is not so, or when the people are
deceived, that it can be otherwise.
There may be difference of policies
to be adopted and bad policies which
are mistaken for good may Drevail
for a time and prove disastrous, but
the people will not when they are
convinced that a certain policy is dis
astrous, continue to support it.
There may be those who will, but
they are those who are especially
benefitted byjthat policy and who
reap profit from it at the expense of
the rest, or the politicians who are
kept in place and power through its
instrumentality.
We have an illustration of this in
the change of sentiment which has
been taking place in this country on
the protective tariff for some years
back, notably in the past few
years, during which some sec
tions where the protection senti
ment was once almost univer
sal, have been nearly revolution
ized. At the present rate of pro
gress, within a very few years the
revolution will be complete. When
the people see the right, as a rule,
they follow it, and it is only when
blinded by prejudice, or when led
astray by the false representations of
lfiaders in whom they put their trust
that they err much, and they are not
apt to persist long in the error when
they discover it.
i But there can be no good govern
ment in State or country where the
citizen does not take interest enough
in public affairs to exert his power
and influence for good govern
ment, when they stand list
lessly by t and let a few
self constituted leaders shape the
policies and make the laws which
govern them. There never is. bad
government for which the citizen is
not directly or indirectly responsible,
and no one is more responsible than
he who having the right to the bal
lot, fails to exercise that right to se
cure good government for himself
and for his fellow citizens. In his
'indifference he not only fails to ex
ercise a right which every citizen
should exercise, but fails in the per
formance of a duty which is imper
ative on every citizen, whatever his
station in life may be, however hum
ble or however exalted. There is no
law in this country to compel a citizen
to vote, but every citizen should have
that within him, that proud spirit
of citizenship which would make it
unnecessary for any one to invite or
urge him to cast his .ballot. In the
line of duty there should be no invi
tation, no urging, no appeal, nor no
inducement of recognition or reward,
but every citizen of his own volition,
- fully realizing and appreciating his
By WH.MAM H.
own individual sovereignty among
thousands of other sovereigns,
should", like a high-spirited, manly
man, cast his ballot for what he be
lieves to be right and against what
he believes to be wrong, for the men
whom he believes to be good,
honest, capable, against the
it: .
men whom ne Deneves io
be bad, dishonest or incapable
If this were the rule, if every well-
meaning, honest citizen did his duty
and deposited his ballot according to
his judgment and his conscience as
he should do, there would be less
cause for complaint in the adminis
tration of public affairs, and fewer,
incompetent men, fewer bad men,
and fewer frauds would slip into re
sponsible positions where they are
powerful for mischief, and from
which it is hard to get them out
when once in, because in these days
of machine politics the man who is
in is much more powerful than the
man who is out.
Good government should be the
aim and object of every patriotic,
honest citizen with intelligence
enough to know what good govern
ment means. The ballot is the in
strument provided by which the citi
zen records his decision as to who
shall administer it and whaThis gov
ernment shall be and he who fails to
speak through the ballot abdicates
for the time being his citizenship and
defaults in a solemn duty which he
owes to himself, to his family, to his
fellow citizens, to his State, his coun
try and to posterity.
The ballot is no toy, no plaything
to be exercised at caprice or pleas
ure; it is a mighty weapon for good
or evil, the exercise of which is a
solemn responsibility and an imper
ative duty which no right-thinking
citizen does and no citizen should
evade.
Autocrat Reed is now putting in
some work on the stump for brother
McKinley out in Ohio. He has two
strings to his bow, and after trying
ing to humbug those of his hearers
who may be gullible by asserting
that a high protective tariff is a big
thing for the people, because it stim
ulates invention, stimulates indus
tries and competition, and therefore
cheapens goods, which is the old ster
eotyped Jie for years advanced as a
justification of high tariff, he swings
off on the sectional tack to fire the
Northern heart and whoop up the
boys to rally for the g. o. p. Here
is a specimen of his oratory on this
line taken from a speech delivered at
Alliance a few days ago:
"Is there anything in the burning sun
of the bouth that makes men claim su
periority over the colder men of the
North? And yet the disfranchisement
of 8.000,000 of people in the South trans
fers their power to men who ought to
be our equals, but seek to be our supe
riors. Are you prepared to do this,
when it is recortfed in the solemn instru
ment called the Constitution of the
United States of America that all men
are equal?"
This is pretty hefty. No one
ever suspected Tom Reed of having
any respect for the. Constitution of
the United States, but the natural
inference would be that a great
statesman like Thomas, occupying
the very prominent position he has
and does occupy, would be at least
somewhat familiar with that instru
ment, and that he would know
enough about it not to confound it
with the Declaration of Indepen
dence, as he does in the conclusion
of this sectional appeal.
The men who are supporting Pat
tison for Governor of Pennsylvania
do not propose to have any fraud
played upon them in the coming
election if precaution and determi
nation can prevent it. The Phila
delphia Times says that an anti
fraud organization has been effect
ed, that a careful canvass of the
voting precincts is now under way,
committees of fearless and deter
mined men appointed, an ample
fund raised, and the best of legal
talent employed to prosecute the
perpetrators of fraud however high
their station in life may be. The
committees have spotted certain
parties who are working the racket
among venal voters, and the.y are
being carefully shadowed and all
their movements noted. The Times
rings the warning, and gives notice
to the briber and ballot thief that if
they escape the penitentiary they
must depend upon miracles.
.
MINOR MENTION.
Mr. Chauncey M. Depew seems to
have got himself into a box by the
high tribute he paid to Grover
Cleveland at the dinner given, in
New York, by Mr. John Russell
Young to Judge Pryor. Some of
the Republican organs deny that he
made the speech, but it so happens
that there was a stenographic re
porter present who took down all
the speeches which were made and
published, and Depew's is printed
literally as it was delivered. The
New York " correspondent of the
Philadelphia Telegraph, Republi
can paper, says the speech was cor
rectly -and exactly reported, but that
Mr. Depew did nor expect to
see it in- print, ana is now
trying to explain it privately,
among his friends If this be so
we are sorry for Mr. Depew, for it
shows that he has hot the nerve to
stand up in public to what he says at
a dinner table in the presence of rep
resentative public men, or that he is
a hypocrite, and says in the presence
of people, to flatter them and
please their friends, what he does
not mean or believe. If Mr. Depew
were to deny or to explain away that
speech it wouldn't-lessen Grover
Cleveland one particle in public esti
mation, but would lessen Mr. Depew
very much in the estimation of every
body who read his tribute as a man
ly man dwarfed into a mere creature
who would swallow his words to pla
cate narrow-minded partisans.
The high tariff organs deny that
the protective tariff breeds and
fosters trusts, and yet no l"ss than a
half dozen trusts have been organ
ized since the McKinley law went
into effect, and these, too, it is need
less to say, are all on protected ar
ticles. Among the highly protected
are the manufactures of window
glass, who have contributed so liber
ally to the fund to aid in the election
of Mr. McKinley. Immediately af
ter the passage of his bill they be
gan the organization of a trust
which was completed last Tuesday,
every glass factory in the United
States, west of Pittsburg, the centre
of that industry, having gone into it
except one, which, of course, will be
either swallowed up or closed up in
due course of time, as one cannot
hold out against all the others com
bined. The object of this trust, like
all trusts, is to regulate the output,
to prevent competition, to put up
and keep up prices. People who buy
window glass now will have to pay
for it just what these trust makers
see fit to demand.
STATE TOPICS.
There is a rumor current which,
the Raleigh News and Observer says,
seems to be pretty well authenti
cated, that Brower, Republican can
didate for Congress in the 5th dis
trict, will be withdrawn and C. A.
Reynold's, of Forsyth county, put up
in his place. The current is so strong
against the Mount Airy statesman
that there is no earthly show for his
election, a fact, it is said, of which he
is now thoroughly convinced him
self. Brower never was a strong
man. He slipped in the first
time by the indifference of the
Democrats who didn't' believe
his election possible, and the
second time pretty much the same
way. Either time, if it hadn't been
for this over-confidence, coupled
with the deception practiced by
Brower in promises made to the dis
tillers of his district, coupled" with
the slouchy campaign made by the
Democrats against him, he never
would have been elected. He is a
weaker man to-day than he ever was,
because the people whom he hum
bugged then know him now. But
swapping horses in the midst of the
race won't win it for the Republicans.
Reynolds would have been a better
nomination in the start, but there is
a strong faction opposed to him, and
he could not pull through much bet
ter than Brower, who seems to be a
dead cock in the pit.
CURRENT COMMENT.
One little 6-a-week clerk in
a store when you come to buy goods
will give you more reliable, informa
tion about the effect of the tariff on
prices than all the statesmen . in the
Republican and Democratic parties
combined. Washington Star, Ind.
The Democracy of the First
Congressional District are aroused,
and well they may be, for Warmoth
is abroad fighting against them with
hands full of boodle contributed by
the National Republican Committee
at Washington, supplemented by a
"force loan" of 25 per cent, of the
salary of every poor clerk in the
Custom House. New Orleans States,
Dem.
The new tariff bill that is
the new standard of protection has
already largely increased the necesr
saries of life generally consumed by
workingmen, and for whose benefit?
Is it for the benefit of labor? If so;,
wages of labor in all protected in?
dustries would advance at once at
least to the increased cost put upon
the necessaries for labor; but have
the wage-earners been given in
creased wages." rnii.rtmes, ind.
Who said that wages would
not be increased after the McKinley
bill had been passed? Now tbey are
offering-$10 a day for able workers
to electioneer in McKinley s district,
The father of the tariff for increased
taxation can at least point to this as
a vindication of himself. But, as
with all the delusive Republican
schemes of raising wages, this will
bef good only until after election.-
N. Y. Star, )em.
---- Opinions tfjr the Supreme Court.
Rakigh News and Observer.
Opinions were handed down-Mon
day as follows:; - - - ; !- "1
State vs. Pritchard, from Bertie;
error; new trial;
Hobbs vs. Railroad.- from Craven;
error; .demurrer sustained.
Lawrence vs. Weeks, from -Hali
fax; error.
Hilton vs.Pritchard.from Hertford;
affirmed.
State vs. Allen, Prom Pitt; no
error.";
Reizenstein vs. Hahn, from Cra
ven ; no error.
Sugg vs. Farrar, from Edgecombe;
error.
Godwin vs. Watford, from Benie;
no error.
State vs. Fleming, from Pitt; no
error.
Myers vs. Rice, from Bertie; no
error.
Hornthall vs. Steamboat Co.,
from Bertie ; error ; new trial
granted.
Wootn vs. Fremont ; error.
HOW THE SIGHT IS HURT.
Every Baby Coach Should Have a Screen
for Sunny Days.
"There are more persons troubled
with defective eyesight than you
would suppose," said an optician to
the New York Times. "In fact, per
fect vision is exceptionally rare with
a large proportion of the inhabitants
of all big cities. Just observe what
a number of people you will meet
wearing spectacles or eye-glasses on
any crowded thoroughfare. They
are not elderly, either; indeed, most
of them are young, and, if you go
through our public schools, you will
see an astonishing number of chil
dren wearing glasses.
"Bad eyesight is often caused
by the neglect of proper atten
tion in very early age. The
eyes are more sensitive to light
than during adult life, yet it is
nothing uncommon for a mother or
nurse to expose the eyes of an in
fant to the glare of the sun for hours
at a time. Serious results often fol
low this negligence, and a large ma
jority of the blind undoubtedly owe
the loss of "their sight to just such
neglect during infancy.
"When children are growing up
their sight is much impaired in dark
city school rooms, where they must
strain their eyes looking at black
board word at a distance. Beside
this, too much cannot be said in
condemnation of the practice of
allowing children at night to study
or read books that are badly printed.
Daylight is God's light, and man
cannot improve upon it. Night work,
and especially reading, is very in
jurious to the sight and will wear a
child's or man's eyes out quicker
than anything else."
NO KISSING IN JAPAN.
Bosy Lips that Pout and Smile, But Make
No Iaorer Happy.
Young Japanese girls, says the
Home Queen, are as nature made
them, and very sweet they are, , too,
in their quaint dresses, showing their
plum chest and rounded arms. Pages
could be written about their charms.
What dear, dainty little dolls they
are! Such white teeth, rosy lips, coy
smiles! Who shall describe them?
And what next? A kiss, perhaps?
Not over here. Oh. never! They
never do. They don't know how;
actually they don't know how, and
even peasant girls are closely guard
ed. Fancy a young man in cotton ki
mono aad wooden clogs stealing a
chance to walk with his best girl un
der the blooming cherry trees, ex
plaining the constellation and quot
ing sentimental poetry, telling her
that he "hung upon her eyelids,"
that "her voice was like a terrible
gong," in fact, that he loved but
her alone, and then making her
several formal bows at the door of
her father's straw-tbatched hut as
they parted in the moonlight. Can
an American lover stretch his imagi
nation enough to believe in a sweet
heart not kissing those pretty lips
paint and all, by a sort of "natural
selection?"
Tis a melancholy fact, but a Jap
anese has no such impulse. No
lover courts his mistress with "sweet,
persuasive kisses." No mother kiss
es her baby as she cuddles it against
her bosom.
TALMAGE SAYS "SLEEP"
Encouragement for Those Who Love to
Ide Abed.
T. DeWitt Talmage says: There
is not one man oi woman in 10,000
who can afford to do without seven
or eight hours' sleep. All those
stories written about great men and
women who slept only three or four
hours a night make very interesting
reading; but I tell you, my readers,
no man or woman ever yet kept
healthy in body and mind for a num
ber of years with less than seven
hours' sleep.
Americans need more sleep than
they are gett:ng. This lack makes
them so nervous and the insane asy
lums so populous. If you can get to
bed early, thenrise early. If you
cannot get to bed till late, then rise
late. It may be as Christian for-one
man to rise at 8 as it is for another
to rise at 5.
I counsel my readers to get up
when they are rested. But let the
rousing bell be rung at least thirty
minutes before your public appear
ance. Physicians say that a sudden
jump out of bed gives irregular mo
tion to the pul$e. It takes hours to
get over a too sudden rising. Give
us time after you call us to roll over,
gaze at the world full in the face,
and look before we leap.
PERSONAL.
A search for the oldest clergy
man in England shows that the - Rev.
John Elliot, vicar ot - Randwich will be
100 inhree months. He preached up
to the age of 95. -
Mrs. Custer, the widow of the
Indian fighter, is a black-haired woman
of medium height and gracious presence.
Her complexion ris rosy, and she is the
picture of health aud youthfulness.
Commodore John Page, , of the
Argentine navy, died recently near the
Bolivian frontier, He was a native of
Virginia, and had served in the United
States and Confederate States navies.
Bishop Huntington, of Syracuse
goes so far as to declare that more than
half of the religious organizations, great
or small, are at present practical con
tradictions of the "Sermon on the
Mount."
Miss Katherine Lee Bates, pro
fessor of English literature at Wellesley
College, and a well-known writer of
verse, is now taking a year's rest in Eu
rope, after which she is to enter on a
year's study at Oxford, England.
MJrs. Augusta Evans-Wilson, the
southern novelist, is short and stout,
with a good natured, intelligent face,
having an expression of happy content
ment, showing that she is on good terms
with her husband -and the rest of the
world.
--It is said that Gladstone is so
sensitive to adverse criticisms that every
newspaper, magazine, book or other pub
lication that comes to Hawarden is ex
amined by members of the family be
fore it reaches hi,m" for fear that some
unpleasant opinion may upset his equi
librium, POLITICAL POINTS.
Thomas B. Reed is now on a
Presidential electioneering tour. It is
pretty safe to say that he has not left be
hind him in Buffalo any considerable
number of Republicans who prefer hira
as a candidate to either Mr. Harrison or
Mr. Blaine. Buffalo Courier, Dem.
James G. Blaine says he feels
like taking a hand in the political fight,
and, the President willing, he will make
two reciprocity speeches in Ohio. The
Plumed Knight has been up so many
political trees that it is no wonder he is
always at home on the stump. Omaha
World-Herald. Dem.
In one breath the tariff mon
gers boast of the blessings of protection,
and in the next they point to the en
largement of the free list in the McKin
ley tariff. After recovering their breath
they invoke attention to the reciprocity
clause iithe bill, which proposes to open
free trade with all the regions of Central
and South America. Phil. Record; Dem.
Kleetric Bitters.
This remedy is becoming so well
known and 'so popular as to need no
special mention. All who have used
Electric Bitters sing the same song of
praise. A purer medicine does not exist
and it is guaranteed to do all that is
claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all
diseases of the Liver and Kidneys, will
remove Pimples, Boils, Salt Rheum and
other affections caused by impure
blood. Will drive Malaria from the
system and prevent as well as cure all
Malarial fevers. For cure of Headache,
Constipation and Indigestion try Elec
tric Bitters Entire satisfaction guar
anteed, or money refunded. Price 50
cents and 1.00 per bottle at Robert R.
Bellamy's Wholesale and Retail Drug
Store.
RPARRT.TMn ITATAWRA SPTtTTTfl-S.
Health seekers should go to Spark
ling Catawba Springs. Beautifully
located, in Catawba county, 1.000 feet
above sea-level, at the foot of the Blue
Ridge mountains. Scenery magnificent.
Waters possess medicinal properties of
the highest order. Board only $30.00
per month. Read advertisement in this
paper, and write Dr. E. O. Elliott &
Son, proprietors, for descriptive pam
phlets. 4
Read advertisement oi Otterturn
Lithia Water in this paper. Unequaled
for Dyspepsia and all diseases of kid
ney and bladder. Price within reach of
all. I
Vx-LJ JL J H i CD
New York & Wilmington
STEAMSHIP COMPAIfY.
FROM PIER 29, EAST RIVER, NEW YORK,
located between Chambers and Roose
velt streets, at 8 o'clock P. M.
BENEFACTOR Wednesday, Oct. 15
FANITA Saturday, Oct. 18
PAWNEE Wednesday, Oct. 23
BENEFACTOR '.Saturday, Oct. 25
Prom Wilmington.
PAWNEE Fridav, Oct. 17
BENEFACTOR., Tuesday, Oct. 21
FAN I T A Friday, Oct. 24
PAWN RE Tuesday, Oct. 23
tar" Through Bills Lading and Lowest Through
Rates guaranteed to and from points in North and
South Carolina.
For freight or passage apply to
H. GVSMALLBONES, Sup t,
Wimington, N. C.
THEO. G. EOER, T. U., Bowling Green, N. Y.
WM. P. CLYDE & CO., General Agents, 5 Bowling
Green. N. Y. oct 14 tf
"TXT ZFZRTT."
CALL AT
Sanders 3? Co.'s
jND TRE IT. THERE YOU WILL FIND A
full assortment of Staple and Fancy Groceries.
A few very fine N. C. HAMS and SIDES.
A nice line of Cakes, Oyster, Lunch, Milk and
Water C ACKERS.
Daily receipts of fresh EGGS and CHICKENS
at the "Unlucky Corner." sep 28 tf
Fish! Fish!!
JUST RECEIVED A FINE LOT OF NICE
Mullets, which we will stH low. Also Hams, Shoulders
end Groceries of all kinds, for sale very low by
ang29 tf T. M. DOBSON & CO.
Notice.
I TAKE THIS METHOD OF INFORMING
the friends and patrons of the late H. C. Prempert,
that the business will be carried on by myself at the
Old Stand, No. 7 South Front street, and it will be my
aim to merit a continuance o( the liberal patronage
given temy father in the past. Very respectfully,
sep 21 tf ARTHUR PREMPERT, Manager.
ANTED AN icTIVE. HONEST MAN
Salary ft lOO monthly if suitable, with oppor
tunities for advance, to represent locally a responsible
New York house. References. Manufacturer
Lock Box 1585 N. Y. to fr feb 20 ly
nmirifnn rsr a. T
WILMINGTON MARKET
- STAR OFFICE, .October 23. ; "
SPIRITS TURPENTINE. Quoted
firm at 38J cents per gallon. Sales later
at 38 cents.
ROSIN Market firm at $1 07 per
bbl for Strained and $1 12H for Good
.Strained,
TAR. Firm at $1 55 per bbl. of 280
fis., with sales at quotations.
CRUDE TURPENTINE Distillers
quote the market firm at f 1 90 for Vir
gin and Yellow Dip and $1-20 for Hard.
COTTON Steady at 9 cents for
Middling. Quotations at the Produce
Exchange were
Ordinary... 8 cts $ 2
Good Ordinary 8 5-16 " "
Low Middling 9 3-16 "
Middling 9 " "
Good Middling 9 " "
m ts m
BECEIFTS.
-
Cotton 1,553 bales
Spirits Turpentine Ill casks
Rosin 686 bbls
Tar , 132 bbls
Crude Turpentine. P 00 bbls
DOMESTICMARKETS.
LBy Telegraph to the Morning Star.
Financial.
New York, Oct. 22. Evening
Sterling exchange quiet: and firm
at 482487. Money easy at 46 per
cent. Governmert securities dull but
firm; four per cents 12; foar and a half
per cents 104. State securities dull
but steady; North Carolina sixes 124;
fours 98.
Commercial. .
New York, October 22. Evening.
Cotton steady; sales 424 bales; middling
uplands 10c; middling Orleans 10 7-16c;
net receipts to-day at all United States
ports 38,615 bales; exports to Great
Britain 14,514 bales; exports to Fiz.ice
' bales; exports to the Continent
1,304 bales; stock at all U. S. ports
551,859 bales.
Cotton Net receipts 50 bales; gross
receipts 9,374 bales. Futures closed
barely steady; sales of 120,100 bales at
the following quotations: October 9.92
9.94c; November 9.949.95c; Decem
ber 10.01c; January 10.08c; February
10.15c; March 10.20c; April 10.28
10.29c; May 10.3510.36c; June 10.42
10.43c; July 10.4810.50c; August
10.5210.54c.
Southern flour firm and in fair demand.
Wheat dull, unsettled and easy: No.2 red
$1 08 at elevator; options fluctuated
lc and closed weak; No. 2 red Octo
ber $1 08; November $1 09; May $112.
Corn dull and easier; No. 2, 59 c at ele
vator; options closed y,c under last
night; weak in sympathy with wheat; Oc
tober 59ic; November 59c; May 61 c.
Oats dull, closing easy; options less ac
tive; Occober 49c; November Zdc; May
524c; No. 2 spot 49Jc; Hops firm, with
a good demand. Coffee-r-options closed
firm; October $18 1518 20; November
$17 6517 70; May 15 45; spot Rio
easier and more active; lair cargoes
20)c. Sugar raw firm and more ac
tive; fair refin ng 5 7-16c; refined quiet
and steady. Molasses foreign nominal;
New Orleans steady and quiet. Rice in
good de.nand and firm. Petroleum
quiet and steady; refined 7 60. Cotton
seed oil firm. Rosin steady and quiet;
strained, co nmon to good, $1 401 45.
Spirits turpentine dull at 42c. Wool in
good demand and firm. Pork fairly ac
tive and firm. Beef dull but steady; beei
hams quiet and easy at 12 5012 75;
tierced beef quiet and firm: city extra
India mess 14 0015 00. Cut meats
dull and weak; pickled bellies 66Jc;
hams 99c; middles quiet and steady.
Lard lower and moderately active; west
ern steam 6 05; city 6; 15; options
October 6 60; November 6 59. Freights
to Liverpool dull and weak; cotton
Chicago, Oct. 22. Cash quotations
were" as follows: Flour quiet and un
changed. Wheat No. 2 spring 1 02
1 02; No.2 red 1 021 02. Corn
No. 2, 524c. Oats No. 2, 43j
43Jc Mess pork $10 1010 20. Lard,
per 100 lbs, 6 37. Short rib sides
f5 405 45. Shoulders $5 62J5 75.
Short clear sides 5 855 95.. Whiskey
$1 13.
The leading futures ranged as follows
opening, highest and closing: Wheat
No. 2, October $1 02, 1 03j. 1 02;
December $1 04., 1 05, 1 05 1; May
$1 08, 1 09, 1 09. Corn No.2, Oc
tober 52, 52, 52c; November 52,
533, 52c; May 55.55, 55Jc. Oats
No. 2, October 44, 44, 43jc; May 46.
473, 47 c. Mess pork per bbl De
cember $10 35, 10 45, 10 40; May $12 87,
$13 37K. 13 073. Lard, per 100 lbs
December $6 50, 6 50, 6 50; May $7 07 f
7 10, 7 10. Short ribs per 100 lbs De
$5 52, 5 57, 5 57; May $6 27U,
6 32, 6 32.
Baltimore, October 22. Flour firm:
Howard street and western superfine
$3 103 60; extra $3 854 70j family
$4 855 35; city mills Rio brands extra
$5 205 37; winter wheat patent $5 35
5 60. Wheat southern scarce and stiff:
Fultz 98c$l 06; Longberry $1 00
1 07; western easy: No. 2 winter red on
spot and October $1)1 1 02. Corn
southern firm: white 5960 cents; yel
low 5960 cents; western weak.
COTTON MARKETS.
3 By Telegraph o the Morning Star.
Oct. 22. Galveston.quiet at 9 13-1 6c
net receipts 9,952 bales; Norfolk, steady
at 9 ll-16c net receipts 5,170 bales; Bal
timore, nominal atlOJc net receipts
bales: Philadelphia, qniet and easy at
10c let receipts 66 bales; Boston,
steady at 10c net receipts bales:
Savannah, quiet at 9 7-10q ret receipts
7,212 bales; New Orleans, ' firm at
913-16C net receipts 8,244 bales; Mch
bile, quiet at 9c net receipts 1,791
bales; Memphis, firm at 9c net re
ceipts 4,712 bales; Augusta, quiet and
steady at 9c net receipts 2,634 bales;
Charleston, steady at 9c net - receipts
3,207 bales.
FORE IGN MARKETS.
By Cable to the Morning Star.
Liverpool, Oct. 22, noon. Cotton
steady: American middling 5 ll-16d.
Sales to-day of 10,000 bales, of which
7,500 bales were American; for specula
tion and export 1,000 bales. Receipts of
8,100 bales, all of which were Ameri
can. . -r
Futures opened steady; October de
livery 5 40-645 39-64d; October and
November delivery 5 36-64d; November
and December delivery 5 35-64d; Decem
ber and January: delivery 5 34-64. 5 35
645 34-64d; January and February de
livery 535-64d; February and March de
livery 5 36-64d; March and April delivery
5 38-645 37-64d; April and May de
livery 5 40-64d; Mayand June deli vrrv
5 42-64541-4d. er
- Tccders 600 bales new and 300 bales
old docket.
, 4 P.M. October 5 39-64d, buyer Oc
tober and November 5 35-645 30-04 h"
November and December 5 34-64'-, ?
64d; December and January 5 34-04 4
5 35-64d; January and February !3 34.
5 3o-64d; February and March 0 3q
64d, seller; March and April 5 37-04V
5 38-64d; April and May 5 39-64.j 40
64d; May and Tune 5 41-64 5 42-04d
Futures closed barely steady.
"Thousands had sunk on the ground
overpowered, the weary to sleep, and
thp wounded to die," bat every intelli
gent reader knows that this happened
before the great discovery of Salvation
Oil.. 1
Colds, coughs and incipient consump
tion cured by Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup a
remedy of fifty years' standing, known
and used all over the world. Do your
self the favor to give it a trial. You will
be amply repaid. For sale everywhere
25 cents. 4
NOTHING SUCCEEDS
LIKE SUCCESS.
The reason RADAM
MICROBE KILLER 5 the
most wonderful medicine. ;
because it has never faiitrf i3
any instance, no matter '-a;
the disease, from LEPKi i V
to the simplest disease kr. 've
to the human sysem.
The scientific men of : -cae
claim and prove that tv
disease is ''
CAUSED BY MICROBES,
-AND
Radam's Microbe Killer
Exterminates the Microbes and anves them o; cf :r.t
system, and when that is done you cannot have .
ache or pain. No matter what the disease, whtt'-c; a
simple case of Malaria Fever or a combination cf
eases, we cure them all at the same time, as we trea: l
diseases constitutionally.
Asthma, Consumption, Catarrh II ro n
cliltla, Blienmatlgm, Kidney and
Liver Dieae, ClillI and Fever, I'( .
male Tronhles, In all it form, and.
In fact, ever y Disease Iiiiauii to he
Human System. ?
Beware of Fraudulent Imitations !
See that our Trade-Mark (same as a -ova af-v
on each jag.
Send for book "History of the Microbe Kiiit-.
given, away by
R. R. BELLAMY.
Druggist, Wilmington. N. (
jan 11 D&W ly
PATPPTAU W. Im Doaglaa Rhoea are
VuUllUn warranted, and every pair
has his name and price lamped on bottom.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE GENTLEMEN.
Fine Calf and Laced Waterproof Grain.
The excellence and wearing qualities of this nhc
cannot be better shown than dj- the strong endorse
ments of its thousands of constant wearers.
SfSaOO Genuine Hand-sewed, an elegant r.nd
9 stylish dress Fhoo which commends Itself.
Syf .OO iiand-sew . Welt. A flue calf t-hoo
unequalled tor style and durability.
S.SO Goodyear Welt is the standard dress
v &noe, at a popular price.
3
.50 Policeman's Shoe isespeclally adapted
lor rauroaa men, iarmers, etc.
All made in Congress, Sutton and Lace.
$3&$2 SHOES
have been most favorably received since Introduced
and the recent improvements make them superior
to any shoes sold at these prices.
Ask your Dealer, and if he cannot supply you send
direct to factory enclosing advertised price, or s
postal fot order blanks.
Wl Li. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
H. VON G LA h N
jaa 11 6m
sa tu th
S
Tnis popular resnedy never fails to
effectually eture
Dyspepsia, Constipation, Sick
Headache, Biliousness
And all diseases arising from a
Torpid Liver and Bad Digestion.
The BRtnrsl result is (rood appetite
and solid flesh. Dose small ; elegant
ly soar coated and easy to swallow.
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
jan 21 D&Wlv
tu th sat
Or the Liquor Habit, Positively Cared
by MJiiiinisterma- ur. uaincs
(Jsldea Specific.
It win be -riven m a cup of cotTee or tea. or in p
ttciasol f-vxi. witncHit the knowledge oHue patent,
tt isatootiitely uarmtess. aoJ will effect a perm
Ddi and . siHwil r cure, whether the pstieii! is f
Eodeme drinker or an alcoholic wreck.
KVER FAILS. Over ioO.OOGdrunkards
n made tempcrM tuen who have taken uoMco
fipecjac in .ht?ir coiles without their knolel.
aad today believe tbey qnU drinking of xtien oa
was will 4S fboofc of irtim;r
JOHN H. HARDIN. Pn.v.
'ly sa tu th Wilmington, N . t
my 17 D&W
"LUCK IS PLUCK"
If yon haVe run a muck against some i
couraging Disease which you don't want your
family doctor to ktUMtt about, remember t""
I explains our Exclusi ve
I OUR NEW BOOK I AgSS1:
smmI; .Testimonials; Book mailed (sealed)
fN for limited ttme.EKIB MEDICAL CO. Buffalo H.T.
IN FIQBTINQ DISEASE, YOU WILL FLSp TBAT
"PLUCK WINS LUCK!!!
ebl3D&W
tu th sat
P? K3 and WWskey Habits
Scured at home witli-
; out pain. i
Ucont FKKL
LH1 i wonri.KY.M.I'.
'Atlanta, i. OincclWK Whitehall St.
feb 13 D&Wlr
tu th sat
STOP AT
ST. JAMES HOTEL.
I EUROPEAN ANP AMERICAN Pl-AN,
It Goldsboro, N. C. Elegant accommodations t"
Ladies. Finest Hoteljn the city. Tout
SpbCialtiiis: Chicago Steak, Quail on
Lynn Haven Bay Oysters, &c. ....
mr 14 tf EDMUNDSON BROS., Proprietor
C3 fri P