Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / March 27, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. THE MORNING STAR, the oldest daily news paper in North Carolina, is published daily except onday, at $6 00 per year, $3 00 fornix months, $1;60 o- three months, 50 cents for one month, to mail sub scribers. Delivered to city subscribers at the rate! of i 2 cents per week for any period from one week to one 'ar- .? . ;j THE WEEKLY STAR is published every Friday m rning at $1 00 per year. 60 cents for six months,' 30 cents for three months. j ADVERTISING RATES (DILY). One square one day, $1 00 : two days, $1 75 f three days, $2 50; four days, $S 00: five days, $3 50; one week, $4 00; t wo weeks, $6 50 ; three weeks, 4 50 ; one month, $10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $24 00 ; six months, $40 00 ; twelve months, $60 00. Ten lines of solid Nonpareil type make one square. 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V.i announcements and recommendations of Candi da's for office, whether in the shape of communica iioi.s or otherwise, will be charged as advertisements. i Contract advertisers will not be allowed to exceed their space or advertise anything foreign to their regu ar business without extra charge at transient rates. Remittances must be made by Check, Draft, Festal Money Order, Express or in Registered Letter. . Only uch remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. Advertisers should always specify the issue or issues iif y desire lo advertise in. Where no issue is named thVa-ivertisement will be inserted in the Daily. Where 'an advertiser contracts for the pape? to be sent to him d-j-inirthe time his advertisement ig in the proprietor :": or.lv be resoor.sible for the mailing of the paper to hts -id-ifess. ' s : i . The Horninc jtar. Uy IVILLIAjI II. BEKNARD, WILMINGTON, N. C- if ; i Friday Morning, March 27. 1891. ' IN GALLS PROGNOSTICATES. Hon. John J. Ingalls, of Kansas, is an interesting character, cris, bright and dashing as well as flash ing, original in expression, and; gen erally in thought, if he ! did some times purloin senatorial panegyrics from antiquated sermons.! Since his exit from the i Senate at the irresistible invitation of the Kansas farmers, he has been talking very freely, with the evident deter mination not to be lost sight of by the great American public, 'which doubtless would forget himj if he kept his mouth shut and failed to remind them from time to time that he was about somewhere ready and anxious for something to turn up that he might take advantage! of to turn up himself. No inconsiderable portion of this great American public, especially in the bailiwick in which the Hon. John J. has been in the habit of perform ing, when not lending his talents to run the Government machinery in Washington, is known by the now fa miliar name of the Famers' Alliance, which has formed a co-partnership with the Industrial Union and sun dry other organizations of more or less numerical strength for the purpose of doing a little business in the political line. Mr. Ingalls didn't think much of this combination for sometime and in his impulsive rashness he showed fight, like the little ball calf which contested the right of way with the locomotive, the result being that he was prompt ly and unceremoniously floored and ' sat upon, since when he entertains quite a different ;opinion of the aforesaid Alliance!, with its various adjuncts, and does' not hesi tate to publicly declare that it will prove a great "force" inj our poli tics. This shows that the obce bright shining orb in the Kansas political firmament is susceptible of impres sidtis and that he can learn some thing from practical demonstrations intimately connected witji personal experience of a shake-up Icharacter, if not from mere observation. He is so well satisfied that it i$ a coming "force" in the political irena that he is beginning to entertain a very high regard for it, and frefm an op ponent is rapidly developing into a zealous first-class champion. He is not a horny-handed son oil toil, nor even a son-in-law. 1 The nearest he ever ca&e to culti vating anything appertaining to the farm was farmers' notes, which he dis counted at eighteen per cent., which shows the interest he todk in .Kan sas agriculture. Not being a horny handed son of toil he can't? get with in the inner gates of the : Alliaflce, and he is therefore apparently will ing to wait around on tne outside and fall into the procession if they will permit him to trot along some where near the head of the column. If actions are ihterpretable and the language of a man who understands the use and application of words as wen as he does means anything, that'swhat the Hon. John J. is lay ing and playing for now. If not, he is wasting a good -fleal of chin music' and doing a good deal of prognosticating just to hear himself talk. But he is not that kind of denizen. He recently managed to have him self Interviewed on the Alliance,when after dismissing John Sherman's pre diction that the Alliance in politics would exhaust itself before 1892 as trifling, he discoursed as follows : "Of course the blatant demagogues, whose claims are unreasonable and un tenable, will not be the ones to carry this movement to the success I look tor it to reach. You will find, however, that with the force behind it and with even partial success these agitators will be forced to give way to the more conser vative element, and the leadership will be assumed by men impelled alone oy philanthropic or patriotic feelings, and whose counsel can safely be followed with the assurance that it will lead to tangible results. The adjustment of the tariff, the expansion of the circulating medium, ana other measures the ab sence of which thinking farmers believe underlie the stagnation that now afflicts them will be advocated by the best minds in the movement in such a way as to carry with thern a strong popular feeling. "I think it may be compared to the feeling of Republicanism which swept over the country from 1856 to 1860. The result might be more quickly reached could the West and the South find common ground on which to stand. The East and the North have recog nized this all along, and have very adroitly prevented any coalition. They know that in the South anything that endangers local government by the white element will be resisted, and that every other interest will be sacrificed to this. They have managed to strengthen this feeling by an occasional menace. In the West sectional feeling has been resorted to with varying success until this year, when it signally failed. Such plays on the passion and interests of the sections have about reached the limit." Knowing what a practical, hust ling politician the Hon. John J. is, how little stock he takes in "irrides cent dreams," his constitutional hankering to ride on the band wagon and beat the big drum, this is sus ceptible of but one interpretation and that is that the ex-Senatorial sky-scraper, and linguistic pyrotech nical performer is ready to be one of those "conservative," "philan thropic," "patriotic" leaders he refers to as leading this coming force to great achievments, if events pan out as well as he anticipates they will. Ingalls' change of heart is note worthy and significant, to say the least of it. MINOR MENTION. The colored and white politicians who are manipulating the Inter-State Civil and Political Rights Associa tion of the United States have issued an address to the negro voters of the North urging them to unite for de fensive and offensive purposes, and to resolve to vote for no candidate for office who will not pledge him self to stand by the colored brother, nor for any one who says that the negro is inferior to the Anglo-Saxon. The moving cause for the issuing of this address was the failure of the Force bill, in which the aforesaid manipulators seem to have taken great interest. But even in this they show how gullible they are when they start out by complimenting Mr. Harrison for his efforts in that direc tion, while he has been studiously avoiding recognizing the negro in the distribution of the Federal patro nape at his disposal. He pulled the wool over their eyes by countermand ing the disbandment of the colored regiments in Washington, and a few days afterwards when a delegation of "Afro-American" editors called on him to urge the appointment of a colored man on the World's Fair Commission, curtly told them the Commission was filled. Then, when they suggested that he nominate a colored man as one of the nine Judges of the Court Appeals, he doubtingly asked if they thought there was a colored man in the Uni ted States competent to sit on the Bench. He got out of the Fair mat ter by saying the request came too late, after the appointments had been all made, but he didn't consider it necessary to explain why he had given the negroes the cold shoulder when he was making the appoint ments. If these address issuers are honest they show themselves about as gullible as the less pretentious colored denizens to whom their ap peal is addressed. The counsel to let the Anglo-Saxon fight his politi cal battles alone is sensible but the animus which inspires it is not." Ex-Congressman McKinley of .Ohio, who was in Boston the other day, was given a reception by his Republican friends, and made a speech mainly devoted to the de fence of the protective tariff and-the work of the Congress in which he took such a cotispicuous part. " He prefaced his speech with the remark thatthis Government was no small 'thing, that it took a million dollars a day to run it and that this million a day must be raised mainly by means of tariff duties. This was an indirect apology for excessive tariff rates. That is just one of the things of which the American people com plain, not the million a day, whiah is not a fair statement of the case, but the two and a half millions a day or more which Republican extrava gance and plundering have saddled upon this country. The Congress in which Mr. McKinley was an active and potent force voted away in round numbers $1,000,000,000, which must be squeezed out of the people of this county by taxation. According to reports from Lou isiana, the cotton planters .of that State are entering into a pretty gen eral understanding to decrease the acreage of cotton planted this year, and to diversify their crops more than heretofore. There is a move ment in the same direction in Geor gia and in South Carolina. If this course were generally adopted throughout the cotton-growing States, the planfers would doubtless find themselves as well, if not better off at the end of the year, as they were when planting the larger num ber of acres. The increased price of the reduced crop, which would cost them less in money and labor to cul tivate and market, would probably bring them in as much clear cash as the larger crops. A still more im portant feature in this movement is the resolution to diversify crops more, and to give more attention to raising home supplies, something which must be done before the South ern planter can get solidly on his feet, or enter upon the road that leads to independence. On this they are to be congratulated, and it is hoped they will resolutel adhere to it. CURRENT COMMENT. The Italian residents in the United States are the people who ought to take the lead in suppressing the Mafia in the United States. N. Y. Sun, Dem. Mr. Healy has accomplished something he has managed to in sult Parnell. He has tried very hard to do so for two months or more, and must have been almost ready to give ud in despair when Parnell at last acknowledged that he was made of "penetrable stuff." Phil. Ledger, Ind. This Republic must not be come the dumping ground of the refuse population of Italy, Bohemia, Hungary and other countries. It is fast getting to be the case through public indulgence through the American habit of letting things run until they become insupportable. Washington Star, Ind. It is said that the eminent New Orleans lawyer, Thomas- J. Semmes, was paid a fee of $10,000 fo- defending those charged with the murder of Chief Hennessy. That fact, however did not prevent his law partner from marching to the parish prison w'ith a gun and assist ing the citizens in killing the alleged murderers. Savannah IVews, Dent. The bill to purchase the relics of" Andrew Jackson was de feated in the Senate by a vote of 12 to 13. It might have been expected. If the cross upon which the Saviour of the world was crucified was offered for sale the present Tennessee Leg islature would not give fifteen cents fot it. Knoxville Tribune, Dem. POLITICAL POINTS. The Republican plot to steal Montana by disfranchising 7,000 natu ralized Democrats upon a technicality may succeed, but the repellant effect of such knavery upon the minds of Repub licans in other States who have con sciences will very certainly make the trick "cost more than it comes to." N. Y. World, Dem. Repeal the McKinley laws! Let President Harrison, if he dares, go to the people in November of 1892 on the issue of that repeal! If the Democrats win then go ahead and untax imported raw materials (which will enable our manufacturers to sell to us as cheaply as to the Brazilians), and after that slowly and carefully, but surely, take out of the tariff piece by piece, step by step, year after year, each unreasonable tax! N. Y. Herald, Ind. That was a genuine coup d' eta of the President to make Gen. Ordway withdraw his order to disband the col ored troops in Washington. He has made amends, apparently, for all previ ous indifference to the negro in the North. They will all probably vote" for him in 1892. They get but little from the Republicans, but that little seems to satisfy them. The President, no doubt, feels that he has paid his debt in full. Norfolk Landmark, Dem It is amusing to see people with their faces drawn as if they had swollowed a feather and it was tickling their lungs and they would be happy if -they could only sneeze. Now there is no need of "making faces." A bottle of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup will draw your face back into a smile. t" Kings are like stars, they rise, and set." They have headache, cuts, and hurts like meaner men, and are just as sure to call for Salvation Oil. f Read advertisement ol Otterburn Lithia Water in this paper. Unequaled for Dyspepsia and all diseases of kid ney and bladder. Price within reach of all. t MISSIONARIES BUYING GIRLS. How , Bishop ' Taylor is . Christianizing: -r . Heathen " Africa. - ";f - - -' The effect of the, Kean Bank fail ure, a dispatch from Chicago says,;is severely felt by the slave-trading chiefs in the Congo country, and has temporally put a stop to peculiar transactions in ; which .Methodist mission funds flayed an important part. This was developed Saturday in the county court in Chicago, "when in trnf" course " of the hearing of Bishop Taylor's fund case some inte esng statements "'were gleaned of the methods- of converting the heathen in Africa. One of' the Bishop's methods, it was testified, is to buy outright young girls from the native kings and chiefs. The Rev. Isaac Line barger, a Methodist preacher of thirty years' standing, and his wife made the statements. Mrs. Line barger said that after duly prospect ing among the various people in the neighborhood the Bishop would buy young girls from, the chiefs and place them irt the mission schools. Technically this process is called "redeeming." Boys do not cost any thing. Girls, however, are worth about $30 apiece. "Last October," continued Mrs Linebarger, "I went to Kean's bank and gave Miss Higgins $30 to re deem a child. She was to be named Minnie Louisa Waukegan." Miss Waukegan was evidently, not of the upper-ten .class, for Mrs. Linebarger testified that she had to pay $100 for three more. Miss Higgins re fused to take the redemption money until Mrs. Linebarger named the children. "One," she continued, "I called Sahara Wentworth Estes that was for my mother. The oth ers were named, respectively. Miss Lewis and Miss Estes. Mr. Line barger said that a large fund had been subscribed for this redemption process, and that it was the inten tion of the missionaries to bring the purchased children under proper Christian influence. UNWELCOME PEOPLE. Human Frailties Pertinently Described by the Editorial Parson. Pittsburg Dispatch. Those who point out to us our own faults. Those who always take their troubles along and leave their joys behind. Those who neglect their own bus iness to attend to that of other people. Those who stay too long when we are busy. Those who have a hobby that they ride to death. Those who always want to talk about things in which we take no in terest. Those who come to dinner when not expected. Those who never have anything to talk about but themselves and the weather. .Those who have a chronic desire to borrow money. Fussy people who have a large idea of their own importance. Those who talk too loud. Those who do not talk loud enough. Those who ask so many questions that they discover our ignorance. Those who are overly positive about things of small importance. Those who come at the very time when we wish they had stayed at home. Those who embarrass us with too much politeness. Those who agree to everything we say, and never have any opinion of their own on any subject. Those who always say, "I do so and so," "I think so and so." The Wealth of the Rothschilds. Mercantile and Financtat Times. The Rothschilds are believed to have $50,000,000 invested in Ameri can securities. Only the Rothschilds themselves know what they are worth, and they never tell family secrets. One of their mottoes is: "Gold never repeats what it sees," and another : "A man will not tell what he has not heard," but some idea of their riches can be had from the fact that since 1815 they have raised for Great Britain alone more than $1,000,000,000; for Austria, $250, 000,000; for Prussia, $200,000,000; for France, $400,000,000; for Italy, nearly $300,000,000; for Russia, $125,000,000; for Brazil, from $60, 000,000 to $70,000,000, and for smaller States certainly between $200,000,000 and $300,000,000 more, perhaps $3,000,000,000. One of the Best. New Berne fournal. Mr. William H. Bernard is to be congratulated. His Star is twenty three years and six months old. It is not only the oldest daily newspaper in North Carolina, but during all these years it has never missed a regular issue and there has been no change of proprietorship or editorial management. The Wilmington Morning Star is-certainly one of the best papers in the State. A Little Girl's Experience In A Light house. Mr. and Mrs. Lor'en Trescott are keepers of the Gov. Lighthouse at Sand Beach, Mich., and are blessed with a daughter1 four years old.. Last April she was taken down with Measles, followed with a dreadful Cough and turning into a Fever. Doctors at home and at Detroit treated her. but in vain, she grew worse rapidly, until she was a mere "haadful of bones''. Then she tried Dr. King's New Discovery and after the use of two and a hajf bottles, was completely cured. Theysay Dr. King's New Discovery is worth its weight in gold, yet you may Set a trial bottle free at R. R. Bellamy's rugstbre. f .PERSONAL. . The late Duke of Bedford was the twelfth peer to commit suicide dur ing this century. Thomas Ball, the sculptor, is busy with a colossal Washington in bronze, which Mrs. Hopkms-Searle.is aboutrto give to the town oT Metheren. The base of-tbe statue will contain busts of the great revolutionary generals, and at each corner will be figures emblemat ical of oppression, revolution, victory and peace., Mrs. Fletcher, who died lately in. England, was the collateral descend ant of Shakespeare, being in a direct line-from Joan Hart, the poet's sister. She was the proud owner of his jug and stick. She carried on an unusual trade for a woman that of gunmaker and made it prosper greatly. A Boston puzzle editor printed a fac simile of Jay Gould's signature and asked his readers to guess whose it was. Among the persons to whom Jhe auto graph was credited were T. Reed, inger soll, Ike Weir, Baron Hirsch, H. Greely, Jubal Early and Inspector Byrnes. Six experts in hand writing guessed the rid dle. Fred Gnether comes to the front with the claim that the late Dr. Hendricks, of South Bend, Ind., sug gested to Gen. Sherman the famous march to the sea, submitting maps of the country and a plan of campaign, nearly two years before the General started on his triumphal tour through the enemy's country. Herbert Welsh says "there is no truth in the report that Sitting Bull was scalped by the Indian police. He was not scalped at all. He was shot in two places by two of the native police. Afterward, when he had been some time dead, tme of the policemen struck the dead body in the head with a club, breaking the skull, but too unexpected ly to be prevented by the others." Gov. Burke, of North m Dakota, illustrates in his own career the possi bilities that are open to American boys of the right sort. He was a New York street waif whom a children's aid socie ty sent went. He says: "If there are any men in the world for whom I have a profound respect they are men who are providing homes for the homeless little ones, and any time I can do any thing for the waifs I want you to call on me." OUR STATE CONTEMPORARIES. If Governor Fowle does not call an extra session of the Legislature to re lieve the industrial masses of unjust taxation he wll deserve for himself and bring down upon the Democratic party the execrations of 200,000 voters. Tar boro Southerner. The people of the South have been drifting day by day from that issue (tariff reduction). Speakers who, two years ago, pleaded with the people for the re duction of the tariff, have since said it was a minor issue. It is the issue above all others. Tariff reform lies at the very base of all financial reform. Let us not forget it. Charlotte Chronicle. If the law as it now stands, in refer ence to taxing incomes, is construed by the language used in the act, without reference to what was known to be the intent of the Legislature at the time in enacting the law, and indeed what they thought they had expressed in the act, when thev had finished their labors, the sooner they are called together again the better for the State and everybody in it. Raleigh Visitor. We believe that the construction put upon the income tax will be that no body will pay it who lives up to his or her income. We are in receipt of a let ter from a prominent member of the Senate who writes that the construction the Chronicle placed upon the law is right that such was the intention of the law-makers. Such a construction is the only just one, and the only one that can prevent the working of serious hardship; and, at the same time, we believe that it is the legal construction. Raleigh Chronicle. Opinions by the Supreme Court. Raleigh Chronicle. Opinions were handed down in the following cases Tuesday: Tucker vs. Tucker, from New Hanover; reversed. Kirkpatnck vs. Holmes, from Orange; new trial. Moore vs. Ray, from Cmmber land; new trial. Roberts vs. Lewald, from Cumber land; motion denied. Whitman vs. Shingleton, from Du plin; new trial. Smith vs. Hicks, from Cumber land; errpr. State vs. Biggers, from Cabarrus; reversed. v State vs. Roseman, from Rowan no error. Vestal vs. Wicker, from Moore; no error. Carey vs. Carey, from Granville; new trial. Blount vs. Washington, from Lenoir; affirmed. Brown vs. Rainor, habeas corpus, from Onslow; proceeding abated by death of defendant. Hollingsworth vs. Tomlinson, from Cumberland; new trial. Worthy vs. Brady, from Moore; petition to rehear dismissed. Advice to mothers. V or Over Fjfty Years Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used by millions of mothers for their chil dren while 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 UnitecVStates, and is for sale by all drug gists throughout the world. Price twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sysup" COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MARKET. STAR OFFICE. March 26. SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market quoted quiet at 37Jcents per gallon. Sales later at 37 cents. ROSIN Market quiet at $1 25 per bbl. for. Strained and $1 30 for Good Strained. TAR. Firm at $1 45 per bbl. of 280 Bs., -with sales at quotations. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Distillers quote the market firm at $2 10 for Vir gin and Yellow Dip and $1 20 for Hard. COTTON. Quiet. Quotations at the Produce Exchange were Ordinary.. 6 cts lb Good Ordinary 7 5-16 " " Low Middling 8 1-16 " " Middling 8 " Good Middling 9 RECEIPTS. Cotton 412 bales Spirits Turpentine 125 casks Rosin 1,633 bbls Tar 209 bbls Crude Turpentine 14 bbls DOMESTIC MARKETS. (.By Telegraph to the Morning Star. financial. New York, March 26. Evening. Sterling exchange quiet and weak at 486489. Commercial bills 485 487 j. Money easy at 34 per cent., closing offered at 3J. Government se curities dull but steady; four per cents 122; four and a half per cents 102. State securities dull and featureless; North Carolina sixes 124; fours 97. Commercial. New York, March 26. Evening. Cotton quiet; sales 105 bales; middling uplands 9c; middling Orleans 9 7-16c; net receipts to-day at all United States ports 17,371 bales; exports to Great Britain 5,683 bales; exports to France bales; exports to the Continent 5,187 bales; to the channel bales; stock at all United States ports 653.180 bales. Cotton Net receipts 1,000 bales; gross receipts 2,329 bales. Futures closed steady, with sales of 65,100 bales at quotations: March.778.78c; April 8.78 8.79c; May 8.868.87c; June 8.95 8.96c; July 9.049.05c; August 9.08 9.09c; September, October and Novem ber 9.099.10c; December 9.129.13c; January 9.179.19c. Southern flour dull and weak. Wheat dull; No. 2 red $1 15 at elevator; op tions early advanced KMC later de clined JslMc, and closed steady at 7c decline after an active business; No. 2 red March $1 15; May $1 10; July $1 06. Corn irregular and mod erately active, closing steady; No. 2, 78 78Jc at elevator; options declined lJlf4C closing easy; No. 2 March 78c; May 72c; July 70c. Oats mod erately active; options lower; March 59c; May 58c; spot No. 2. 5960c, Coffee options steady and closed quiet; March $17 4o17 50; May $17 20; spot Rio dull but steady. Sugar raw active and firm; refined unchanged and quiet. Molasses New Orleans firm and active. Rice firm and active. Petroleum quiet and steady. Cotton seed oil firm. Rosin firm and quiet. Spirits turpentine steady and quiet. Pork easier, with less demand. Beef fairly firm; beef hams strong and wanted. Cut meats quiet and strong. Lard lower and quiet; West ern steam g6 70; city $6 106 15; April $6 67; May $6 75. Freights to Liver pool dull and unsettled; cotton 7-64 Ud; grain Id. Baltimore, March 26. Flour quiet and steady. Wheat southern very firm; Fultz $1 051 13; Longberry $1 081 13; No. 2, $1 09; western quiet and easy; No. 2 winter red on spot and March $r 071 08; May $1 08 1 08. Corn southern fairly active and firm; white 74J75 cents; yellow 73 cents; western steady at a decline. No market to-morrow. Chicago, March 26. Cash quotations were as follows: Flour unchanged. Wheat No. 2 spring $1 00; No. 2 red $1 01 1 02. Corn-No. 2, 64c. Oats No. 2, 52c. Mess pork, per bbl., $11 75. Lard, per 100 lbs., $6 426 45. Short rib sides $5 605 65. Dry salted shoul ders $4 504 60. Short clear sides $5 90 6 00. Whiskey $1 16. The leading futures ranged as follows opening, highest and closing: Wheat No. 2, March $1 01, 1 01, 1 00; May $1 03, 1 03, 1 02. Corn No. 2, March 67, 67, 64c; May 68, 68, 65c. Oats No. 2, May 54, 54, 53c; June 54, 54, 52Jc. Mess pork per bbl --March $11 95, 12 00, 11 77; May $12 10, 12 17, 11 92. Lard, per 100 tbs March $6 45, 6 47, 6 42; May $6 60, 6 62, 6 57. Short ribs per 100 fts March $5 65, 5 70, 5 60; May $5 80, 5 85, 5 75. COTTON MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. March 26. Galveston, quiet at 9c net receipts 16 bales; Norfolk, steady at 8,c net receipts 1,621 bales; Bal timore, nominal at 9c net receipts bales: Philadelphia, quiet at 9c net receipts 321 bales; Boston, quiet at 9Jc net receipts 698 bales; Savannah, quiet at 8 5-16c net receipts 1,968 bales; New Orleans, steady at 8 ll-16c net receipts 8,748 bales; Mobile, quiet at 8c net "receipts 91 bales; Memphis, steady at 8c net receipts 725 bales Augusta, steady at 8c net receipts 440 bales; Charleston, steady at 8c net receipts 2.235 bales. FOREIGN MARKETS, By Cable to the Morning Star. Liverpool, March 26, noon Cotton dull with prices generally in buyers' favor. American middling 4Jgd. Sales to-day 6,000 bales, of which 4,900 were American; for speculation and export 500 bales. Receipts 5,200 bales, all of which were American. Futures quiet but steady April and May delivery 4 52-64d; May and June delivery 4 57-64d; Jtme and J,uly deliv ery 4 61-64d; July and August delivery 4 51-64d; August and September delivery 4 52-64d; September and October de livery 4 51-64d. Tenders of cotton to-day 200 bales new docket. 4 P. M. American quiet at 5d; middling 4Jgd; low middling 4 9-1 6d; good ordinary 4 5-16d; ordinary 4Jd; April 4 54-64d, seller; April and May 4 54-64d, seller; May and June 4 59-64d, seller; June and July 4 60-64d, seller; July and August 4 52-644 53-64d; Au- fust and September 4 54-64d, sellers; eptember and October 4 52-644 53 64d; October and November 4 52-64d, seller November and December 4 51-64 4 52-64d. Futures closed firm. NOT ONE SORE NOW. Baby Afflicted wltn Bad Sore and Eruptions. No Heller. Perma nently Cured by tne Cntlcnra. During the summer of 1889 my eighteen months old infant was so afflicted with eruption, that ordinary domestic remedies failed to give any relief. O. his mP JTold often appear the seeming track of a litt V wire-like worm, and on other pans of his body bad sores came and remained till I proenred the Cuticura Remedies. For some time I used the soap and salve without a blood medicine, but they did not do so well as when all were used together. It has now been nearly a year since the eruption was healed, and I very much feared it would return with the warm weather of this year, but the summer is passed and not one sore has appeared on him. Mrs. A. M. WALKER. Carsonville, Ga. Sore from Waist Down. I had three of the best physicians in Paducah and they did me no good. I used your Cuticura Remk dies, and they have cured me sound and well. I was sore from my waist down with eczema They have cured me with no sign of return, I owe my life to Cuticura, for withou' a doubt, 1 would have been in my grave had it not been for your remedies. Allow me to return my sincerest thanks. W. H. QUALLS, Paducah, Ky. Cuticura Remedies. If the thousands of litt'e babies who have been cured of agonizing, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly and blotchy skin and scalp dir eases could write, whit a host of letters would be received by the proprietors of the Cuticura Remedies. Few can appreciate the agony these little ones suffer, and when these great remedies relieve in a single application the most dis tressing eczemas and itching and burning skin diseases, and point to a speedy and permanent cure, it is posi tively inhuman not to use tKem without a moment's delay. Sold everywhere. Price, Cuticura. 50c.; Soai 85c.; Resolvent, $1. Prepared by the Potter Dm c, and Chemical Corporation, Boston. sena lor How to Cure Skin Diseases. PADyXJ Skin and Scalp preserved and beautified DADl 0 by Cuticura Soap. Absolutely pure. HOW MY SIDES ACHES ! Aching Sides and Back, Hip, Kidnev. ami IT. ' i t'i i . . . ' j rjA ulcr,ac ains, ana tineumausm relieved i'lln one minute bv the Cuilrnm Antl-Paln Plaster. The first and only in stantaneous pain-killing plaster, mar 1 D&W ly we fr TEH POUNDS TWO WEEKS THINK OF IT! As a Flesh Producer there can be J no Question bat that 1 Of Pure CcdLWerOil and Hypophosohites Of Lime and Soda is without a rival. Macy have grained a pound a day by th use cf it. It cures CONSUMPTION, SCROFULA. BRONCHITIS, COUGHS AND COLDS, AND ALL FORMS OF WASTING DIS EASES. AS PALATABLE AS MILK. Be sure yon get the genuine as there are poor imitation. oc 22 D&Wly we f r su GOLD MEDAL, PASIS, 1378. . Baker & Co.-s Breakfast C ocoa from which the excess of oil has been removed, Is Absolutely Pure and it is Soluble. No Chemicals are used- in its preparation. It has more than three times the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is therefore far more economical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, strengthening, easily digested, and admirably adapted for invalids as well as for persons in health. Sold by Crocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., DORCHESTER, MASS. an 1 DAWOm su we fr DUCRO'S It ia highly recommended by the Physi dans of Paris as A TONICfor WEAK PEKSONS.and A REMEDY for LUNG DISEASES; giyes STRENGTH to OVERCOMES an auaca 01 YELLOW, TYPHOID AND MALARIAL FEVERS. Its principal inaTedient, PUBE MEAT, la scientifically formulated with medical remedies, aivipK it remark- hio aimnltncr nronerties: invworatinar the vital forces without fatfeuiniy the digestive organs. 26 ly fri Special Bargains JN TOBACCO AND CIGARS. 75 Bbls SALT MULLETS at bottom prices. SAMUEL BEAR, Sr., mar 15 tf 12 Market Street. Do Drop in at No. 7 gOUTH ' FRONT STREET WHEN YOU want anything like a good Hair Cut or Shave. Strictly first class. Respectfully, mar 8 tf ARTHUR PREMPERT. To Whom it May Concern. JT CONCERNS EVERY ONE "WHO WANTS a good article of Hardware and prices to correspond, to just examine what we have, and then if our prices are not right it will be our fault. We will offer for the next fifteen days, for cash, our sample line of Heating Stoves at prime cost, mar 22 tf ALDERMAN, FLANNER & CO. . "For Bargains JN TOBACCO, SNUFF, FLOUR, SOAP, CHEESE and many other articles, call on or order fr0m WOODY & CURR1E, mat 1 tf Grocers and Commission Merch ant. STOP AT ROCK SPRING HOTEL JpOR CHEAP FARE AND GOOD ACCOMMO- dation. Furniture and Bedding all new. The new proprietor, ADOLPHUS LEWIS, give notice to his friends and the public that the House is now open On Chesnut street between Front and Water, mar 13 lm J
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 27, 1891, edition 1
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