Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Nov. 30, 1890, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBUSHER'S-ANNOUNCEMENT. THE MORNING STAR, the oldest daily news paper in North Carolina, is published daily except Monday, at $6 00 per year, $3 00 for six months, $1 60 for three month, 50 cents for one month, to mail sub scribers. Delivered to city subscribers at the rate of 12 cents per week for any period from one week to one year. THE WEEKLY STAR is published every Friday morning at $1 00 per year. 60 cents for six months, 80 cents for three months. ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One square one day, $1 00 ; two days, $1 75 ; three days, $2 50 ; four days, $3 00; five days, $3 50; one week, $4 00; two weeks, $6 50; three weeks. $8 50; one month, $10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $34 00 ; six months, $40 00 ; twelve months, $80 00. Ten lines of olid Nonpareil type make one square. All announcements of Fairs, Festivals, Balls, Hops. Picnics, Society Meetings, Political Meetings, &C, will be charged regular advertising rates. 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Advertisements on which no specified number of in sertions is marked will be continued "till forbid," at he option of the publisher, and charged up tq the date of discontinuance. Amusement. Auction and Official advertisements, one dollar per square for each insertion. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra according to the position desired. , Advertisements kept under the head of "New Adver tisements" will be charged fifty per cent, ertxa. Advertisements discontinued before the time con tracted for has expired charged transient rates for time actually published. Pavments for transient advertisements must be made in advance. Known parves, or strangers with proper reference, may pay monthly or quarterly, according to contract. All announcements and recommendations of candi dates for o.nce. whether ir inapt of communica tions or otner.vie. vij Dtc.-.-c-- a-acverasemenis. Contract advertisers wil r.-. '' their space o- - vcrtise any" '. e ar business wit aout extra cr.j r flowed to esceed : t in": to their regn transient rates. Rernirtar,-r5 mnst be roar? Money Or-rr. Ex?res or such rerairtar.re r-.l- be a" t Advert.ser- fn".4 aiiiy; they desire f aJvc-t' -. the aivt" -r .' rr - -an adv?-: cf'-.t-aci- " during ti t.mt li:s a'i . T:- -wd oiv TTsrer,s:t-e C - ec k . Draft, P ostal , : letter. Only .-c publisher. -r- issue or issues --r . . sue is named - -c Daily. Where ? sen: to hire - r the proprietor " - s of tie paper tc J'hc 3Hov:uiin Star, By WILLIAM H. SrKXABD. WILMINGTON, N. C. Sunday Mgrxino. Nov. 30, 1890 SOTJTHEBS P233RESS. Col. McCIure. editor of the Phila delphia Times, has made a tour re cently through several of the South ern States, and on his return pub lished an editorial descriptive of what he witnessed, which, coming from as excellent a source as that, is a superb advertisement for the South. He was at the Alabama State Fair, held at Montgomery, where he de livered an address. Speaking of the display at the fair he says. The Montgomery Exposition, now just closed, was a most interesting study to any Northern visitor who has been accustomed to the State Fairs of Penn sylvania. It exhibited the remarkable progress that the South is making in the cultivation of the fertile lands of that region. We have seen many State ex hibitions of the Agricultural products of Pennsylvania, where we point with just pride to our excellent farms, but we never witnessed a display of the pro ducts of the field that equalled the dis play of the farmers of Alabama. The idea, he says, which prevails in the North that the progress of the South is wholly or chiefly in iron and coal is a very much mistaken one, for great as that has been and is, in advancement her agriculture has kept abreast with the growth of other industries. In all the States east of the Mississippi (his tour was confined to the'se) from the Virginias and Kentucky down to the Gulf the progress in agriculture lias been rapid which he attributes in a great meas ure to the factjthat the large planta tions of anti-war times are yielding to the small farms, -vrrc.i are worked by the owners or Ic-s and as a result there is betr tillage with a corresponding increi-e 'f products. Even in Missis -ipp., hat much misunderstood and m . ; i misrepre sented State, he says t - -re are evi dences of substanti si r; ess onfall sides. As an illu :r.ui..i he cites the city of Meride:; v n only agri cultural wealth to qui ;.-.; ;ts growth, to-day exhibiting more energy, more progress and better agriculture than can be found in any of our agricul tural towns in Pennsylvania, and capital is as safely invested there as in any section of the North and at increased rates." He regards the South's advancement in agriculture as one of the most hopeful signs of great and permanent prosperity. We quote the conclusion of this interesting editorial because it gives the views of one of the most obser vant and cool-headed among the ablest of Northern editors, from the leading city of Pennsylvania, which is a rival of the Southern Iron States in the iron business, and for the further reason that it corroborates the views that we have frequently expressed in these columns as to the South's being the point to wkich th Northern home-seeker will ulti mately and in the near future turn. He says : Alabama logically leads her sister States of the South in the development of wealth, because there is no State in the Union with an equal combination of wealth in field, in forest, in, mine, in mill, and in natural highways to the markets of the world, and it is specially gratify ing to note that white her cities sud denly created by her profusion of iron, coal and limestone in close proximity, have sprung up in startling suddenness, but on sure foundations, her fertile lands, capable of outstripping Pennsyl va n ia in wheat and corn and equaling any State in cotton, have made her ag ricultural industry rapidly advance in both product and profit, and her forests of virgin timber are now greatly swelling the wealth of the State. Ten years ago Birmingham, the first of the iron centres of the far South, was a straggling village skirted with forest, and conservative business men feared the permanency of its growth; but to-day it is a substantial city of 30,000, with infant cities springing up around it, and business credit is now as well es tablished there as it is in conservative Philadelphia. Nor is Birmingham alone as a a land mark of industrial growth. A score of industrial centres have grown up in Alabama as well as other scores in Georgia and Tennessee, with Atlanta and Chattanooga as their centres, and all of them give very evidence of certain, safe and marvelous advancement. "It is a fact not generally understood in the North, that the industrial growth of the Southern States east of the Mis sissippi, and especially the agricultural growth, has beeu more raid, more sub stantial and more satisfactory to emi grants, than the industrial growth of the new States ot the West. The climate is more salubrious; the access to markets is vastly better; the certainty of crops is much greater, and the variety of pro ducts is many times multiplied. Indeed, if the industrial people who start from the Eastern States to find new homes for their families in new sections of the country, were intelligently advised of the cjuntless advantages the South ot fers them over the far Western States, the whole tide of industrial emigration would speedily turn from the boasted sway ul empire toward the setting sun and settle down in the Sunny Soutti. It must be so sooner or later, and .- jTi at the latest; and the sooner it is so. ie sooner wiil our migrating industri.:' nco p'e best employ their oppoitunities." Ti.i? is the judgment not of ? Southern man. who might be ii fli -e nceJ by partiality for his own sef- ba; bra disinterested, mteili t" erver from a rival section, cs candidly of what he h s : what he knows. Such arti- do much to turn Northern . Southward. ge c ' t th. IfOTOE. MENTION. Mr. Cleveland is the victim of misplaced confidence. A few days ago Mr. Nelson A. Acers, who was Internal Revenue collector for the Srate of Kansas under Mr. Cleveland, wrote to him a letter intima ting that some Democrats elected to the Legislature might vote to re turn Ingalls to the Senate, to which Mr. Cleveland replied as follows : "There is no one thing of the same grade of importance which has resulted from the recent election or which ought to please Democrats and decent people so much as the prospects of the retire ment of Ingalls. I do not know what kind of a Democrat it would be who would not labor in season and out of season to prevent the return to the Sen ate of this vilifier of everything Demo cratic, who has been put forward by the Republican party to pour out abuse too bad for even decent Republicans, and who was made the presiding officer of the Senate to crown their insults to our party." There is not a line nor a word in this which is not true, but still Mr. Cleveland was very much annoyed when he saw it fn cold print. Fie savs it was a private and confiden tiil utter and thtj the man to wiom it was written had no right to betray hi? confidence by rushing into print with it. If Mr. Cleveland wrote it as a confidential communication and it was so under stood, of course the man did wrong to print it, but there is nothing about ifbf a private or confidential charac ter. It speaks of Mr. Ingalls a a public man, not as a citizen, and criticis es him only in his public capa city, and we see no occasion why Mr. Cleveiurl should beriled at rhe m;m wh p i')!ished it, thinking that i': -re-by he wis contributing to p--: the re i a of this "vilifier of r. v thing I);moc-aMc" to the Se . -tit. Mr of 'ii' is nor. now Pres.Je.it 'J.ii'.eJ Urates, but a p i zen and there is no more va"" im )r j vir v -a : c v o.j. i ) ; ny in his expressing his si" about any public char to triere is in any o'her sa0 izen doing so. If he rias about public men, as puolic m? i. .v'nch he objects to making p iM;c, he should not write them. B i as anatter of fact he need not feel sore over this, nor need Ingalls, They are even now. On a former occasion, when Mr. Cleveland was President, Mr. Ingalls indulged in some very caustic criticism of him, and afterwards said he was very much annoyed at seeing it in print, for it was uttered in social inter course and was not intended for the public ear. This is the first oppor tunity that Mr. Cleveland has had to get even with him and they both ought to be satisfied now. The Washington correspondent ot the New Vork Tribune says the Sen ate will changes its rule to enable the Republican, to close debate, when in the judgment of the majority it should be closed. The Republicans it is said, are intent upon passing the re.-Apportionment bill and the Force bill, and this' is the only way they can do it, cut off debate after what the majority may deem a "reasona ble" discussion and gag the Demo cratic minority, as the Democratic minority m the House was gagged under the Reed rules. Mr. Edmunds, who under an assumedppearance of fairness, has as much gall in him to the square inch as any man in the Senate, says this can be done ' under the Senate rules as they are, without any change, although when the tariff bill was under consideration and a reso lution looking to limiting debate was offered he distinctly stated that he would oppose any movement to limit debate, thanking God that there was "one House where there was free dom of debate." But these Repub lican head-lights can change their opinions very readily when party in terests demands it. It remains to be seen whether the Senate in the light of the late expression of popu lar opinion will defy it by pursuing a course which .brought the House into disgrace and brought upon it such a rebuke as was never admin istered to any representative body in this country before. Tom Reed, who is now in Wash ington, has been again interviewed on the recent election, and he gives it as his opinion that the chief rea son for the defeat of the Republi cans was that the people were not sufficiently informed on the tariff question. And ye. Mr. Reed and his gang ('id their levei best to prevent the people from be:ng informed .on it by adopting the gag rnle and chok ing off discussion. They iliunL want the people to be informed on it, and they therefore adopted the gag ruleo cut off debate and prevent the Dem ocrats from showing up that job in its true colors. But Mr. Reed is mis taken. The people were informed on it. The campaign of education had been going on, the people were studying and discussing that ques tion as they had neVer studied or dis cussed it before, and they under stood it better than they ever did be fore. It was the intelligence and not the ignorance of the American people which laid the Reed gang out on their backs. CURRENT COMMENT. The Republicans have been trying to put the blame for the re cent disaster on the women, saying their complaints about the extra cost of things affected the votes of their male relatives, when everybody knows that the higher a bonnet is the better a woman likes it. Phil. Times, Ind. The Blue Room of the White House, it is announced, is to be dec orated anew at a cost of 12,000. As this is a pretty heavy expense it would be well for the artist to obtain Mrs. Cleveland's ideas about the de signs, etc., so that no change will need to be made within the next six years. Charleston News and Courier, Dem. The Tribune announces that the Democrats are "afraid of them selves," because they resolved not to make the blunders to which the Re publicans invite them. We cannot return the complimenC The Repub licans seem to have the courage of their stupidity to the extent of persevering in the outrages which the people of the country have just so signally condemned. N. Y, Star, Dem. The Indians in Canada num ber more than one-third as many as in the United States. Yet, strange to say, there are no ghost dances and no eager awaiting the Messiah among the Canadian Indians. But, then, ihe Indians in Canada are not bleseJ with such a luxury as a great governmn. bureau and with ucfnkindly prou-c . as agents and post-traders. Why hey dance nightly ghost u...,l ;, ;..c light of he November mcou a;.i ;'ay for a Messiah to corne quickly -uk! deliver them from their pale-faced benelac tors. Phil. Record, Dem. WHEN VANCE WaS YOUNG. The Early Days When He Was Employ ed in a Hotel. " Observer," in Asheville Citizen. I have noticed in your paper that you have been giving short sketches of some of our citizens. I saw Sen ator Vance on the street to-day, and I thought I would attempt to give the intelligent readers of the Citizen a short sketch about Senator Vance. Senator Vance in his early days was full of fun and ready with the other boys to remove signs and place them in isolated places. I think he was about 18 or 20 years of age when Mr. John E. Patton, owner of the Warm Springs, employed him as a clerk in the hotel. Mr. Pat ton was a very strong Whig; so was his clerk, Mr. Vance. At that time, before the war I think it was 1848 or 1849 the patronage that came to Asheville sulphur and warm springs was all from South Carolina. I well remember before the war that we did not have twenty people from eastern North Carolina during any summer. In front of the old Warm Springs hotel there was a beautiful lawn with shade trees where all the guests would assemble and play cards and other amusements. Mr. Vance would,' when..: ordered, send out' porter, ale "and whiskey for the guests of the hotel. The guests were nearly all South Carolina Democrats. Vance would get into" heavy discussions with them about the Whig and Dem ocratic parties. Mr. Vance generally used them completely up in the dis cussion. - " At the close of the season Mr. J. E. Patton said tq Mr. VancC that he was too smart a young man to be fooling about a hotel. When the season closed Mr. Vance went to Chapel Hill and studied law. After wards he returned to Asheville, and when quite a young man run for the Legislature against Dan Reynolds, father of V. T., Dan and A. S. R., and was elected by a large majority. From that day his course has been upward. THE BIGGEST SAILING SHIP. Boston Herald. The Shenandoah, launched at Bath, November 26, is not only the largest craft of any kind ever built in Maine, tmt she is the largest sail ing ship in the world. Her keel is 290.5 feet long and 30 inches deep, made of oak aud hard wood. She has three decks. The spars are the hreaviest ever made in Maine. -She will spread 11,000 yards of sail. Her rigging is wire, and she is the first wooden ship to use turn buckles in place of lanyards, though many schooners have them. Five thousand tons will be re quired to load her, and she will tl ";n draw twenty-seven feet. The ship will carry thirty-eight meu. OUR STATE. CONTtMPORARIES. The talk about Vance being in danger of losing his seat is all bosh. However, this should not cause the Democrats to relax any efforts toward securing his re election. Assurance should be made trebly sure. Reidsville Review. There has never been an organization without outside foes and inside traitors. We have more than once warned the Farmers' Alliance against such two-fold danger, and been bovcotted for "criti- cisint the leaders." Hickory Press and Carolinian. How long will this election of Senator be agitated? The legislators aie elected A majority of them were instructed to vote for Vance. They cannot go back on it. His election is sure. Now let the matter drop, and spend a little time thinking what can the Legislature do after electing him. 7 arboro Banner. Brower is taking it pretty hard. In addition to indicting the publishers of the Reidsville Renucio on a charge of libel, as noted elsewhere in this issue, he had a warrant served on Joseph Brad field at Winston Monday. In a pair of minutes Hradheld had given bond with the editor of the Republican as surety, and the Daily says Bradfield didn't scare worth a cent. Greensboro Demo crat. POLITICAL POINTS. John James Ingalls still claims that he will be re-elected to the United States Senate, but there seem to be sev eral banana peels in his pathway to the coveted goal. A ashville American, Dem Some of the painfully virtuous Republican editors are very anxious that Quay should send in his resignation. Thev seem to be very much shocked because he has not answered the charges against him. Atlanta Constitution, Dem. If the Republican party will only keep its promise to stand or fall by the McKinley Tariff bill, the country will regard it as one of the greatest acts of the g. o. p.'s existence, and in Nove.m- bor, 1892, there will be another celebra tion with a great demonstration of roost ers. Memphis Appeal-Avalanche, Dem. By a changed system of book-keeping in the Treasury, which counts as cash on hand various dedicated' and security funds which were not so count ed by his predecessor, he hopes to be able to sh5w that there is no deficit. But such a showing will be dishonest, and made for the sole purpose ot de ceiving the people. Rochester Union and Advertiser. Dem. TW.NKLINGS. There are two things that al ways make a man dream mince pie and love. Atchison Globe. The woman lives the longest. For anv five veteran soldiers long since dead there is an average of 152 widows. ude. Married people, it is said, live longer than single ones'! It seems longer, any wy to unhappy couples. Boston Traveler. There are so man)' people in the world who laugh all the way home, and stop as soon as they reach the door. Atchison Globe. "The Ciymers' reception was a failure. The rooms were not half full." "Well, some of their. guests did their best to make up for it." New' York Herald. "Ah, good morning," said the early bird to the worm. "Looking for a job?" "That's what. Any thing I can do for you?" "You'll about fill the bill, I think." Sparks. "Have you had much experi ence in Wall street?" "Tremendous." "How long were you there?" "Twenty minutes." N. Y. Sun. First Farmer I raised a finp crop of wheat this year and lots of pota toes ana caDDages. Second Farmer Well. T HiH than that. I raised a $4,000 mortcrao-p West Shore. uY-aa-s." said Gus dp Tav T'm of a very facetious disposition, don't vou Know, i m suan mat in make a jest when I'm dying." . "Dear me!'.' exclaimed Miss Gushton, "how I should like to hear you." Washington Post. Boomtown Citizen O, we have a fine class of citizens here. Our jail is empty and has been for a month. Visitor Yes, I judged from the gangs I have seen around th salnnnn v.. . . . "-.vwud mat your iail was either empty or so full it could not hold any more. Tndianap- olis Journal. ' PERSONAL. -rr Dr. Koch is a bigger man just nowjthan old Bismarck or old Moltke, or even than the young Kaiser himself. -Clara Greenwald, of Bernville, Pa., probably is the youngest school teacher in the country. She is but 13, and has taught one term with success. , Gen. Rice, one of the Alliance candidates for United States Senator from Kansas, starts on his race with his son in the Legislature to vote against him. Camille Desraoulinsthe famous journalist of the French revolution, whom .Robespierre used until Danton was condemned and then sent to the guillotine, is to be commemorated by statue in Paris. Mr. Hogg, the Democratic candidate for Governor of Texas, will have in the neighborhood or 150,000 majority. Yet there are people who will go right ahead declaring that there's nothing in'a name. - Sainton, the violinist, who died recently, was an-accomplished artist, and left behind him what he calls the re cipe how to obtain eminence. For the greater part of his life he practiced for sixteen hours a day. David Meriwether, of Louis ville, Ky., Secretary of State in that commonwealth away back in Henry Clay's time, and later Governor of New Mexico, celebrated the completion of his 90th year a few days ago. Arlington House, Dayton, O. I think that Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup is perfectly wonderful in its effects, three or four doses cured me of the worst cough. C. L. NORTH RUP. 'T am no orator, as Brutus is but, as you know me all, a plain, blunt man, that loves my friend" to well too see him "niggling with pain, when a bottle of Salvation Oil. will cure him so here's the twenty-five cents for the great pain cure, t iflrite lo AIotliei-B. For over fifjty years Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used by millions f mothers for their chil dren whikr' teething. Are you dis turbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth? If so send at once and get a bot tle of "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sy rup" for Children Teething. Its value is incalculable. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immediately. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures Dysentery and Diar rhoea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the Gums, re duces Inflammation, and gives tone and energy to the whole system. "Mrs Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for children teething is pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of one of the oldest and best female physicians and nurses in the United States, and is for sale by all drug gists throughout the world. Price twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for "Mr. Winslow's Soothing Sypttp " A Safe Investment. Is one which is guaranteed to bring you satisfactory results, or in case of failure a return of purchase price. On this safe plan you can buy from our ad vertised Druggist a bottle of Dr. King's New Medical Discovery for Consump tion. It is guaranteed to bring relief m every case, when used for any affection ot 1 hroat, Lx)ngs or Chest, such as Con sumption, Inflammation of Lungs, Bron chitis, Asthma, Whooping Cough, Croup, etc., etc. It is pleasant and agreeable to taste, perfectly safe, and can always be depended upon. Trial bottles free at Robbert R. Bel lamy's Wholesale and Retail Dru Store. . r SPA RKTiTJfQ CATAWBA SPBXNGS. 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 $dO.UO per month. Read advertisement in this paper, and write Dr. E. O. Elliott & Son, proprietors, for descriptive pam phlets. "1 Industrial MaMfactaring Company WILMINGTON, N. C. MANUFACTURERS of TINNED WOODEN BUTTER DISHES DIAMOND BASKETS, Berry Baskets, Fruit and Vegetable Crates, CANDY BOXES, Orange Boxes, &c,, &c. VENEERS CUT TO ORDER FROM SWEET GUM, POPLAR, SYCAMORE, OAKL ASH, BIRCH, WALNUT, &c. This Company has an Established Reputation for the Quality of its Work. Can Compete in Prices with any similar Establish ment in the United States. Orders for Car Load Lots filled on short notice. Samples and Prices on application. Factory on Cape Fear River, corner Queen and Surry streets. Address Industrial Manufacturing Co. WILMINGTON, N. C. sepSD&Wtf WILMINGTO ft MARKET. STAR OFFICE, Nov. 29. SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market dull at 36 cents per gallon. Sales of receipts at 36 cents ROSIN Market firm at $1 10 per bbl for Strained and $1 15 for Good 55 per bbl of 280 Strained. TAR. Firm at $1 Hs., with sales at quotations. ions. NE. Distillers tfl 90Jor Vir- CRUDE TURPENTINE. Distillers quote the market firmat $ 1 90Jor Vir gin and Yellow Dtp and $1 20 for Hard. COTTON Quoted dull at 8 cents R for Middling. . Quotations at the Produce Exchange were Ordinary 64 cts lb Good Ordinary 7 9-16 " " Low Middling ; 8 5-16 ' " Middling 8. " " Good Middling. ...9) " " RECEIPTS. Cotton Spirits Turpentine. Rosin Tar. Crude Turpentine. 349 bales 242 casks 533 bbls 113 bbls 1 bbl DOMESTIC MARKETS. LBy Telegraph to the .Morning Star. Financial. New York, Nov. 29. Kvening Sterling exchange quiet and steady at 483488J. Money easy, with no loans; closing offered at 4 per cent. Gov ernment securities dull but steady; tour per cents l!iM; tour and a half per cents 104. State securities dull and featureless; North Carolina sixes 121; fours 97. "" Commercial. New York, Nov. 29. Eveaing- Cotton quiet; sales to-day of 294 bales; sales last evening, not reported, 67 bales; middling uplands 9 7-16 cents; mid dling Orleans 9 cents; net receipts to day at all United States ports 46,290 bales; exports to Great Britain 14.006 bales; exports to France bales; ex ports to the Continent 8,217 bales; stock at all United States ports 673,- 079 bales. Cotton Netreceipts 659 bales; gross receipts o.yyo Dales, f utures ciosea barely steady; sales of 36,300 bales at the following quotations: December 9.16 9.17c; January 9.279.28c; February 9.379.38c; March 9.45c; April "9.53 9.54c; May 9.619.62c; June 9.70c; July 9.779.78c; August 9.819.82c; bep- tember 9.519.o3c. Southern flour dull. Wheat dull; No. 2 red $1 03 W at elevator; options closed firm and c above yesterday, with trad ing light; No. 2 red December $1 02c; May $1 063o'. Corn steady and mod erately active; No. 2, 60c at elevator; options dull; December and May 60c Oats dull, weak and JMc lower; op tions dull and weaker; December 4934 495gc; May SlfgC; No. 2 spot 49 50jc; mixed Western 4851c. Hops dull and weak. Coffee options steady; closed 5 points down to o points up, with better cables and quiet; December $17 2517 30; May 15 1515 25; spot Rio quiet and firm; fair cargoes 19mc. Sugar raw dull and firm refined quiet and steady. Moiasses Mew Orleans quiet and steady. Rice dull but steady. Petroleum steady and quiet; refined at all ports 7 30. Cotton seed oil dull and depressed. Rosin dull but firm; strained, common to good, SI 451 50. Spirits turpentine dull at 4040Jc. Wool quiet and barely steady. Meats quiet and steady. Lard opened weak and closed firm; western steam $6 25; city $5 85; December $6 15 and nominal; January $6 45 asked. Freights to Liverpool cotton Jgd; gram 2d. Chicago, Nov. 29. Cash quotations were as lollows: flour unchanged. WTheat No. 2 spring and No. 2 red 92 924c. Corn No. 2, 50c. Oats No. 2, 4343c. Mess pork $9 00. Lard, per 100 lbs. $5 85. Short rib sides $5 25 5 30. Shoulders S4 754 87f. Short clear sides $5 705 80J Whiskey $1 14. The leading futures ranged as follows opening, highest and closing: Wheat No. 2, November 92ij 92,", 92 Uc; De cember 92, 93, 92Jc. Corn No. 2, November 50 7. 51 K. 5 Or- Deremher 50 J.. 51U. 50c. Oats No. 2, November 43, 43. 43c: December 43V, 43J, 42c. Mess pork per bbl December S 90, 8 90, S 90; May $11 95, 12 00, 11 So. Lard, per 100 lbs December 85 80. 5 85, 5 82 ; May $6 62 6 65, (H55. Short ribs per 100 lbs December 5 20, 5 22,5 20; May 6 07, 6 10, 6 05. Baltimore, Nov. 29. Flour quiet. Wheat southern quiet: fultz 90c SI 00; Longberry 93c$l 00; western quiet: No. 2 winter .red on spot and November $1 00; December 94j?ic. Corn southern quiet; white 4857c; yel low 46o7c; western easy. COTTON MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Nov. 29. Galveston .quiet at 9 5-16c net receipts 4.710 bales: Norfolk, steadv at 9c net receipts 3,397 bales; Balti more, dull and nominal ; at 9c net re ceipts bales: Philadelohia. auiet and steadv at 9 7-16c net receiots 1.425 bales; Boston, no report net receipts bales; bavannah, quietat 9Jgc net re ceipts 939 bales; New Orleans, quiet at y i-ibc-net receipts 1,131 bales; Mobile, easy at 9 l-16c net receipts 1,319 bales; iviempnis, steady at yc net receipts 3,323 bales; Augusta, quiet and steady at 9c net receipts 1,759 bales: Charleston. steady at 9c net receipts 3,026 bales. KOREIGN MARKETS. By Cable to the Morning Star. Liverpool, Nov. 29,; noon. Cotton dull without quotable change; American middling 5 3-16d. bales to-day of 7,- 000 bales, of which 5,400 were Ameri can; for speculation and export 500 bales. Receipts 2,100 i bales, all of which were American. Futures firm American middling (1 m c) iNovemDer and December deliv ery 5 3-645 2-64d; December and January delivery 5 4-64d, 5 3-64(i5 5-64d; January and February delivery 5 9-64d, 5 8-645 9-64d; i February and March delivery 5 12-64d; March and Aprtl delivery 5 14-64&5 15-64d: Aoril and May delivery 5 17-64&5 18-64d: Mav and June delivery 5 19-645 20T64d; June and July delivery 5 21-64d. Tenders of cotton to-day 1,500 bales new and 500 bales old docket. Gen. Boulane-er. after SDendine' the winter in Egypt, will return to the Island of Jersey, and there edit a daily newspaper mat win De pDlisned in Paris. JobPrmliniOlce AND- BOOK BINDERY COMPLETE IN All its Appointments! EVERY variety OK PRINTING, RULING AND NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS. The reascn KADAM'S MICROBE KII.I.F.H most wonderful niedieir-t because it has never fa;:tl; , any instance, r.i na;u? v in the disease, frc:m I.Kl'RiKy to the simplest disease kn -.vi. to the human syje;-:. The scientific ir.tn . f t -da. claim and prove ti u! CVtr disease is CAUSED BY MICROBES, AND Radam's Microbe Killer Exterminates the Microbes and anves them out of the system, and when that is done you canr. t have an ache or pain. No matter what the disease, wht;hera simple case of Malaria Fever or a ccn:b:r.a:icn of dis eases, we cure them all at the same lir.ie. as we treat a'. diseases constitutionally. Asthma, Conttuuiptlou, Catarrh, SSroi: . cbJtls, lllicuuiallni, Kidiicy ant! Liter DUease, Chill? and Fever, Fe male Troubles, in all it lorn;, and. In fact) every Disease known lo the Unman System. Beware of Fraudulent imitations! See that our Trade-Mark same as above! at rear- on each jng. Send for bock "History of the Microbe Killer, given away by K. R. EL LLA." 1 . Druggist, Wilmington, N. C. Sole Agent, nnn su tu th jan 11 DAW ly I took Cold, I took Sick, result: I take 'My Meals, I take My Rest, AND I AM VIGOROUS ENOUGH TO TAKE ANYTHING I CAN LAY MY HANDS ON ; fefting flit too, for Scott's mulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphitesof Limeand SOda ONLY CURED MY IlBCip- icnt Coaisuinplion but built ME UP, AND IS NOW TUTTING FLESH ON MY BONES AT THE RATE OF A POUND A DAY. i TAKE IT JUST AS EASILY AS I PO MILK." SUCH. TESTIMONY IS NOTHING NEW. SCOTT'S EMULSION IS DOING WONDERS DAILY. 'rAKE NO OTHER. oc 22D&WIy we fr su IX O'Connor REAL ESTATE AGENT. Wilmington, North Carolina. REAL ESTATE BOUGHT and SOLD Loans Negotiated on Cry Property. Stores, Dwellings, O res and Ha.ls for Rent. Rents collected. Taxes and 'nsuracce promptly attended to. Houses and Lots for sale on the monthly ins"'ro'nt plan. Cash advanced on city Property. ap Liyerpool &-Londoii & Glolie Insnrance Co. OP ENGLAND. Assets - - $40,000,000. SMITH & BOATWRIGHT, Agts- nov83 tf stop at the: 1 BURNS HOUSE, WADESBORO, N. C, "T OCATED IN THE HEART OF THE BL'SI ness part of the Town, and convenient , fos Conine rial Men. Table Board the best the market affords. Omnibus meets all Trains. I I TOOK j ! ULSiOPI aovSTtf MRS. J. K. b""
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 30, 1890, edition 1
2
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