Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / April 17, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. THE MORNING STAR, the oldest daily news oaper in North Carolina, is published daily except Monday, at $6 00 per year, $3 00 for six months, $1 50 i o- three months, 60 cents for one month, to mail sub cibers Delivered to city subscribers at the rate ot 1:1 cents per week for any period from one week to one yi-ar. THE WEEKLY STAR is published every Friday moroing at $1 00 per year. 60 cents for six months. oO cct;ts for three months. ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One square one dav, $1 00 : two days, $1 75 ; three days, 50 ; four days, $3 00; five days, $3 50; one week, f4 00, two weeks, $6 5b; three weeks, $8 50; Jf ath $10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $24 00 ; sis fat.athsV $40 00 ; twelve months, $60 00. Ten lines of solid Nonpareil type make one square. Ali announcements of Fairs Festivals, Balls, Hoot, Pieces, Society Meetings, Political Meetings. &c, wil; re purged regular advertising rates. 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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, Postal Money Order, Express or in Registered Letter. Only S'ch remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. Advertisers should always specify the issue or issues they desire to advertise in. Where no issue is named the advertisement will be inserted in the Daily. Where aa advertiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him during the time his advertisement is in the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his address. ghc gHoruiug jltor. Hy WILLIAM II. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, N. C. Friday Morning. April 17, 1891. WILL BLAINE SE IN IT ? There is a report from Washing ton to the effect that a party of Blaine boomers recently visited Washington for the purpose of get ting Mr. Blaine's consent to the use of his name as a Presidential candi date in 1S92. He met them gra ciously and in reply to their request, after hesitating for some time, said he could not consent to enter the race against President Harrison. But he said it in such a way that his friends left him feeling that while Blaine could not -announce himself as a candidate they were at liberty to boom him in their own way, which they proposed to do. Blaine's position is a somewhat peculiar, one. As far as leadership, statesmanship, personal magnetism and personal popularity go he over shadows Harrison in every' particu lar. He has ten devoted followers to Harrison's one, and yet because he occupies a place in the cabinet he has to play second fiddle to Harri son and swallow his aspirations and throttle his ambition lest he give offense to the envious, ambitious man whom he made President. Harrison knows, as the whole coun try knows, that Blaine is by long odds the most conspicuous figure in the Republican party, that he is the only man in it who possesses the elements of leadership to an eminent degree, that if a poll of the Repub lican party were taken as to the choice for the nomination for the Presidency as between Harrison and Blaine, Blaine would get ten votes to Harrison's two. Wherever the test has been made of the Republi can members of Legislatures this has been about the proportion, and yet Harrison has the adamantine cheek to expect Blaine to tuck himself away, and leave the field all to him. In fact he has substantially said, if not in so many words, that he don't expect any member of his cabinet to listen to any suggestion of a nomina tion, remarks which would apply only to Mr. Blaine as there was, as he knew, no other member of his cabi net figuring in that role or liable in any way to antagonize his efforts for a re-nomination. The suspicion has gone abroad, which seems to be pretty well found ed, that Harrison has become in tensely jealous of Blaine's pop ularity as evidenced by the re peated and numerous expres sions of popular opinion and has on more than one occasion man ifested this in a striking way. It first became apparent when Blaine struck upon the reciprocity idea to save the Republican party from the wreck which he saw was inevitable if it went before the country on the McKinley tariff without any redeem ing feature. The idea took with the Republican masses who gave Blaine the credit for it, although the scheme did not originate with him. But he had the sagacity to utilize it and try to work it in as a part of the policy of the Republican party, as an offset to the increased tariff rates proposed by the McKinley bill, which he made no secret of Con demning. While McKinley & Co. found it necessary to accept reciprocity in favor of which public sentiment was so pro nounced, they so manipulated it as to give Blaine the least advant age from it and to put it in the power of Mr. Harrison to declare when and where it should go into operation. Harrison, Reed and Mc Kinley were determined that he should reap the smallest possible amount of prestige and glory from his reciprocity, which ia a modified form they have incorporated into the McKinley monstrosity. But the most striking evidence of this jealousy was exhibited when Mr. Harrison interrupted negotia tions for rciprocity with Canada and snubbed both Blaine and the Cana dian commission by telling them that they would have to postpone the conference agreed upon, for which the commission had come by appointment to Washington, until his return from his swinging around the circle. This was a surprise to both. Blaine and the commission, neither of whom anticipated such a capricious hitch as that. The commission was highly incensed, Blaine was mortified and has been chafing over it ever since. He couldn't resent it without an open rupture with the administra tion, which would have arrayed against him the army of Harrison's officeholders. He was too shrewd to do that. But since then he has had less indisposition to antagonize Harrison's nomination if it can be done without seeming -to be instru mental in it himself. In other words he now feels justified in putting him self "in the hands of his friends" with out saying so in so many words, and letting them manipulate the wires according to their own judgment, with, probably, an occasional hint in a quiet way from him. And then if his nomination be regarded as "es sential to party success," of course, he will accept it, unless he comes to the conclusion in the meantime that there is no use in any Republican ac cepting it. . With this proviso, it may be concluded that, if Blaine was out, he is now in it. MINOR MENTION. James Hitchcock, of Michigan, was convicted of murder thirty five years ago and sentenced to imprison ment for life. It has been lately as certained that he killed the man in self-defence, and that he was con victed on perjured testimony by the State's witnesses. He has been re leased and now applies to the State for indemnity. He can get none, for there is no law to grant indemni ty when the State convicts and wrongfully punishes. This man has served thirty-five years in prison at hard labor; he comes out to find his property gone, his family scattered, and himself a stranger in the com munity to which he returns where thirty-five years ago he was wrong fully branded and condem'ned as a murderer. There is no redress, but there should be. The State claiming to be a sovereign body, which it is, holds that it can do no wrong, although it does wrong fre quently. The State arrests a man on suspicion, or on false testimony, holds him in jail for an indefinite period, and when tried it turns out that the wrong man has been ar rested, or it convicts on false testi mony or on circumstantial evidence, and discovers later that the man was wrongfully convicted and punished, but there is no reparation in eithef case. This is wrong. The State which demands justice, and ad ministers justice should do justice to those who become the innocent vic tims of its power, when their inno cence is established. .This would be demanded of an individual, it should be conceded by the State. Secretary Blaine's reply to the last note of Premier Rudini in reference to the demands in the New Orleans affair, was evidently written at his leisure, after due consideration and mature deliberation. It commits this Government to nothing, states its position clearly and strongly, and corrects an error into which Premier Rudini permitted himself to fall by too hastily reading and construing Mr. Blaine's first note in reply to Minister Fava. He plainly tells the Italian Government that this Gov ernment did not obligate itself by treaty to guarantee protection to life and property of Italians who come to this country to follow their avocations and take their chances with other people, and while in certain contingencies this Gov ernment might out of gra- ciousness be willing to grant indem nity for loss of life or property by violence, it does not recognize the principle nor concede the right to demand such indemnity by virtue of treaty stipulations. His phraseol ogy here is more to the point and more guarded than his hasty iJis patch to Gov. Nicholls, in which he virtually admitted this obligation, and which doubtless formed the base of Italy's demands. He also informs Italy that there are several questions to de determined before the question of indemnity can come up for consideration, some of which are whether these alleged Italian subjects are really Italian subjects, whether they came to thU country in violation of the immigration laws, whether they were obeying the laws ot this country undec which they claimed protection &c, from which we take it that Mr. Blaine has been posting himself on the antecedents of the aforesaid Italian subjects, and expects to show that they were not in fact Italian subjects, such as Italy should feel bound to take an interest in, but criminals, refugees from Italian justice, here in violation of law and defiers and violators of the law while here. If Rudini can see any cheer ful prospect of satisfaction or in demnity in the language of this re ply he can see more than any one on this side of the water can. On the whole Mr. Blaine does very well talks like a well-built, full grown American, and leaves Mr. Rudini to proceed with his diplomatic nut- cracking. Atlanta did the clever thing and did it very handsomely in the recep tion and attention paid to the Presi dent and his party on their arrival in that city Wednesday. From the re ception speech by Gen. Northen, which was a model of expressive brevity, composed of thirty-two very short words, to the public reception and the concluding private reception in the evening at the Governor's residence, where Mrs. Northen, as sisted by a number of leading so ciety ladies, received and entertain ed the ladies of the Presidential party, everything was in good taste, passed off in the happiest order and was much enjoyed by the visitors, who left Atlanta with a very pleas ant impression of the city and her people. STATE TOPICS. Rocky Mount is looming up into a tobacco market of considerable im portance. The papers of that town state that since August last 5,000, 000 pounds have been shipped from that point. This is somewhat re markable, in view of the fact that to bacco culture in that section is an industry of recent growth, and has reached these proportions within a few years. It is evidently no longer all cotton in that section, something upon which the farmers are to be congratulated. But to get the full benefit of this crop, Rocky Mount and the farmers who raise the tobac co, should turn their attention to the manufacture of the leaf. If one fac tory be started, it will soon be fol lowed by another, and that by a third, so on. There's money in it. CURRENT COMMENT. The spectacle of John James Ingalls, arrayed in a tightly-buttoned frock coat, a red necktie and gold eyeglasses, driving cows or assisting in the planting of potatoes, while he stirs up the recalcitrants with the scholarly and sarcastic invective of which he is such a master, will be worth going to Kansas to see. Columbia State, Dem. Some wild speculation is be ing indulged in concerning the re moval of the capital. At this point the District of Columbia rises to re mark that if such an event, through some tremendous union-shattering convulsion, should ever occur, she will at once set up a government on her own- account, with the hand somest capital ' city in the world, immovable and everlasting as the eternal hills. Wash. Star, Ind. Those New York Italians who attempted to demonstrate their patriotic sympathies by shooting holes in an American flag at Lefevre Falls should " be hustled down to Castle Garden and fired into a mud scow or just anything that will take them out of American territory with out undue delay. Such people are unfit to become citizens. There are fools enough born in this country and we should never import any if we know it. Savannah News , Dem. Since we have free sugar in the United States, cheap sugar has mysteriously made its appearance in Canada. Retailers have reduced prices in Montreal 20 per cent. As there is . profit of about $6 per bar rel in smuggling sugar from the United States into Canada the smugglers are getting the credit ot reduced prices. It would appear that in introducing a little legiti mate" free trade in the United States an illicit and unintended benefit has outsiders. Opinions by the Supreme Court. Raleigh News and Observer. ; Opinions were handed ddwn Tues day as follows : Pardue vs. Givens, Union; motion denied. McKesson vs. Smart, Mitchell; new trial. Muse vs. Insurance Company, Moore; error. '. - Fulps vs. Mocks, Alexander; no error. Hulland vs. Patterson, Iredell; error; judgment modified. State vs. James, Alexander; ap peal dismissed. Town of Durham vs. Railroad; motion to retax; costs of printed matter allowed as to part of same. Ashby vs. Page, Stokes; no error. State vs. Stubbs, Catawba; no error. THE SEATED BULL." His Last Exploits as Set Forth by a Paper That Knows it All. Youth's Companion. A French periodical called Science Pour Tous (Science for All), which declares its aim to be the enlighten ment of the public, recently pub lished the following absurd article "We have received some interest ing information concerning the inci dents which preceded the recent rising in arms of the Indians in the West, and one of the first engage ments. "The Seated Bull, their chieftain, having resolved to make known the fact that the Indians had not re ceived their annuities and certain promised munitions, betook himself to the Capitol at Washington. "There he laid before the Presi dent of the legislative body his com plaints of the governmental agents, who, he declared, had stolen what was the Indian's due. "He was informed that his declara tions would be taken under con sideration, and he departed. But the promise having remained without performance, the Seated Bull once more came to the Capitol. "This time, in the midst of the assemblage, the Seated Bull did not utter a word, but drew his toma hawk and dealt with it a terrible blow upon the marble table which was before him. The table was broken in two, and the chief's toma hawk buried itself in the floofer be neath. "It was the token of the chief's declaration of war. "The Seated Bull then left the Capitol without any one daring to lay a hand upon him. Returning to his canoe, which he had tied to one of the piers of the great bridge across the Potomac River, he pad dled rapidly back to his own terri tory." "ONCE A GOOSE." An Unfortunate Tailor's Experience with a Dude. V. Y. Sartorial Art Journal. A merchant tailor of New York, who has had several thrilling experi ences, relates his tale of woe in the Sun of March 24th, under the above heading, as follows: "To the Editor of the Sun: "Sir Four years ago I was a mer chant tailor, owned three houses and a good business. A Murray Hill dude got in my debt $260; could not get him to pay me. I advertised the bill for sale. He then sued me for 10,000 damages. I then put the bill up in my shop with a note on it bad debt for sale he sued me again for $5,000. The Judge at court said it was libel, and an out rageous libel. My lawyer and his lawyer now own two of the houses I once owned. After I settled the cases I met the dude with a suit of, my clothes on. I then licked him. Sued me for this, and tor this I now have a mortgage on the other house. The only thing I ever got from this one of the Four Hundred was his measure. I have it yet. It is not for sale. My experience is this: I would sooner have a bad debt than a good lawyer. I now sell for cash. "Once a Goose." However much he was once a "goose," it is quite evident that his resemblance to that fowl of prover bial stupidity is not now perceptible. By the way there is a great deal of wisdom in his last paragraph, so much indeed, that if changed to read: "1 is better to have a bad debt than a good lawyer," it should become a familiar proverb. POLITICAL POINTS. An Indiana man is reported to have fainted when he was offered seven dollars for his vote. The rise of five dollars from the old price was too much for him. The report omits to state who had been bulling the market so out rageously. Pittsburg Dispatch, Detn. . The banks of Boston are re fusing to accept silver certificates in set tlement of balances, these certificates coming into New England as part of the direct tax refunded to the States. This is a financial rebellion that has a trea sonable aspect. There is a specific law that the silver certificates are legal tender and must not be refused. Mem phis Appeal-Avalanche, Dem. The promise of the Republi can leaders to spend the surplus has been redeemed, according to Secretary Foster, who declares that he does not expect that there will be a surplus in the treasury next' year. There is none now, in fact, since a slender balance on paper of $12,000,000 is maintained only by counting as assets about $20,000,000 of fractional silver coin and over $50, 000,000 deposited by national banks to retire currency- notes. Phil. Record, Detn. Speaker Reed has had a num ber of imitators, but the Speaker of the Connecticut House stands at the head of the class, and could give even Mr. been conferred upon J Ml. Record, Dent. " Reed a few oointers on how-to run things. He counted the hats in the cloak room to make a quorum. All that is now necessary to constitute a Connecticut Republican House of Rep resentatives is a Speaker and an assort ed lot of hats. Heads or brains are not at all- needeft fac&sonville Times Union, Dem. PERSONAL. Duke Nicholas of Leuchten- berg, who died recently, was a victim of the cigarette habit. Rev. R. L. Kidd, a Canadian evangelist, boasts that he can recite the entire Bible from memory. Verdi has finished a comic opera entitled "Fallstaff," which is to be brought out at Milan next winter. Comedian Digby Bell is the son of Canon Bell, of Cheltenham, England, a light of the English church. Prof. D. S. Jordan, the newly appointed President of the Leland Stan ford University of California, will re ceive a yearly salary of $10,000. Miss Julia Marlowe is said to have the most wonderful faculty of me morizing of any woman on the' stage, and she finds that this faculty has been intensified by her recent illness. The dawn of returning reason grows brighter and brighter with pass ing time in the mind of the ex-Empress Carlotta. She is now able to take some part in tne management of her home near Lacken. . Zola requires nine months to write a novel. He handles a pen as a laborer might a spade, and is a slow and painful toiler. The expression Bon his face when he is doing literary work i one of torment. Senator Edmunds is only 62 years of agei but he looks as if he had weathered many more' winters. He ap pears quite feeble and worn out, and his tall, bent form and white beard indicate an old and weary man. Phil. Times. C. B. Lewis, the humorist, whose Lime Kiln, Arizona Kicker and other sketches have given the Detroit Free Press for twenty pears past a pecu liar reputation, has accepted a position on the staff of the New York World. Rev. Richard Gilmour, Bishop of Cleveland, who has been at the point of death in Florida, was raised a strict Scotch Presbyterian and was converted to the Catholic faith by a priest to whose church he went- in youth to play the organ. The wonderful cure by Salvation Oil of Mr. M. S. Culp, 229 George St Baltimore, md., wno was lor many years so prostrated with Rheumatism as to be entirely helpless, has awakened wide-spread interest in this remedy. It costs only 25 cts. "If the heart of a man is depressed with cares and suffering, the mist is dispelled when the bottle appears iNot a bottle ol spirits, oh no! but a small vial of that invaluable compound known to civilization as Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup, which will cure a cough or cold immediately. t Advice to mom em. t or Over Fifty Years Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used by millions ol 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 uttle 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 "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Svpup " Good Looks. Good looks are more than skin deep, depending upon a healthy condition of all the vital organs. If the Liver be in active, you have a Bilious Look, if your stomach be disordered you have a Dys peptic Look, and it your Kidneys be af fected you have a Pinched Look. Se cure good health and you will have good looks. Electric Bitters is the great al terative and Tonic, acts directly on these vital organs. Cures Pimples, Blotches, Bolls and gives a good complexion. Sold at R. R. Bellamy's Drug Store, 50c. per bottle. t OXTSTTDIE'S New York & Wilmington STEAMSHIP COMPANY. New YorK for Wilmington. Pawnee. Saturday, April 4 Fanita Wednesday, April 8 Benefactor Saturday. April 11 Wilmington for New fork. BENEFACTOR Fridav. Arril 3 PAWNEE Saturday, , April 11 Wilmington for 'Georgetown. FANITA Tuesday, March 31 PAWNEE Tuesday, April 7 Through Bills Ladmcr and Lowest Thrrmch Rates guaranteed to and from nnints in North nnri South Caroliaa. For freight or passage-apply to H. G. SMALLBONES, Supt.. THEO. G. EGKR, T. M., Bowling Green, N. Y. ' WM. P. CLYDE & CO., General Agents, 5 Bowling uriccu. . . mar as tt TWO GAR LOADS GRANULATED SUGAR 2,000 Barrels G-oocL ZEi1oclx'. 40 BUS. A 10. 1 MULLETS. LOW PRICES. HALL & PEARSALL. ap5 D&W tf COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MARKET., X ' STAR OFFICE. April 1. SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market steady at 353 cents per gallon. Sales at quotations. ROSIN. Market firm at $1 22 per bbl. for Strained and $1 27 for Good Strained. TAR. Firm at $1 35 per bbl. of 280 Rs., with sales at quotations. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Distillers quote the market firm at $2 25 for Vir gin and Yellow Dip and $1 40 ior Hard. COTTON Nominal. Quotations at the Produce Exchange were Ordinary 6 cts $ lb Good Ordinary 7 5-16 " " Low Middling 8 1-16 IVllUU.'lIlg 07a Good Middling . . 9 RECEIPTS. Cotton. Spirits Turpentine. Rosin Tar Crude Turpentine. . 195 bales 80 casks 977 bbls 312 bbls 22 bbls DOMESTIC MARKETS. LBy Telegraph to the Morning Star.) financial. New York, April 16. Evening. Sterling exchange quiet and easier at 486489. Commercial bills 484 487J. Money easy at 34 per cent., closing offered at 3. Government se curities dull but steady; . our per cents 122; four and a half per cents 101. btate securities dull but steady; North Carolina sixes 124; fours 98. Commercial. New York, April 16. Evening. Cotton steady; sales 138 bales; middling uplands 8 15-16c; middling Orleans 9Jjjc; net receipts to-day at all United States ports 9,453 bales; exports to Great Britain 4,218 bales; exports to France bales; exports to the Continent 2,348 bales; to the channel bales; stock at all United States ports 576,517 bales. Cotton Net receipts bales; gross receipts 769 bales. Futures closed quiet and steady; sales 49,200 bales at quota tions: April 8.588.60c; May 8.638.64c; June 8.728.73c; July 8.808.81c; Au gust 8.868.87c; September 8.908.91c; October 8.938.94c; November 8.95 8.96c; December 8.988.99c; January 9.039.04c; February 9.109.11c. Southern flour active and stronger. Wheat higher, with a good export de mand; No. 2 red $1 191 20 at eleva tor; options strong and 1K2C above yesterday; No. 2 red May 1 17; fune $1 14; July $1 12-. Corn strong and higher; No. 2, 8283c at elevator; op tions 23c higher and closed strong at best prices; May 7934c; June 77 c; July 7534c. Oats higher and strong; op tions stronger; May 62mc; June Qlc; July 61c; No. 2 white 63c; spot No. a, blJ4bdc; mixed Western 59U3c. Coffee options opened steady and closed dull; April $17 3017 35; May $17 2017 24; June $17 10; September $16 0016 05; October $15 45; Decem ber $14 6514 70: spot Rio dull but steady; fair ca:goes 20c. Sugar raw quiet and steady; refined firmer, with a good demand; cut-loaf 534c; powdered 5c. Molasses foreign quiet; New Or leans firm, with a good demand. Rice fairly active and firm. Petroleum quiet and steady; refaned $7 20. Cotton seed oil quiet and steady; crude, off grade, 2427c. Kosin hrm and quiet; strained, common to good, $1 701 75. Spirits turpentine dull and easy at 394394c. Wool steadv and quiet. Pork quiet and firm. Beet .airly active and firm; beef hams quiet and firmjtierced beef inactive and firm. Cut meats firm and quiet; shoulders 55Jc; hams 10c; middles dull but firm. Lard higher and strong, with a moderate demand; Western steam $7 10; city $6 50; options May $7 15; June $7 30; July $7 44 bid; August $5 57 bid; September $7 50; refined quiet. Freights to Liverpool dull and weak; cotton 7-b4d; gram 2d asked. Chicago, April 16. Cash quotations were as follows: Hour quiet and firm. Wheat No. 2 spring $1 07 1 07; No. 2 red $1 07 1 08. Corn No. 2, 73Jc. Oats No. 2, 56c. Mess pork, per bbl., $12 87. Lard, per 100 lbs., $6 87J4. Short rib sides $6 376 40. Dry salted shoulders $5 055 17M. Short clear sides $6 606 65. Whiskey $1 16. The leading futures ranged as follows opening, highest and closing: Wheat No. 2, April $1 05, 1 07M 1 07; May $1 05, 1 07, 1 07. Corn No. 2, April 71, 73;g,73; May 70, 72, 72c. Oats No. 2, May 55M, 56, 56c; July 53, 54, 54Jc. Mess pork per bbl May $1265, 12 97. 12 97K; July $13 021, 13 35, 13 32. Lard, per 100 fts May $6 85, 7 00, 7 00; Tuly $7 12, 7 25, 7 25. Short ribs Der 100 lbs Mav i 32, 0 45, 0 45; July $6 62, 6 77, 6 77. DALiiMOK, April iu. Jf lour very strong; city mills 1025c up. Wheat southern in good demand and firm: tultz $1 121 18; Longberry $1 15 1 20; western strong; No. 2 winter red on spot and April $1 14il 14; May Si 14J41 liM.. Cornsouthern strong: white 82 cents; yellow $1 cents; .west ern strong. COTTON MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. April 16. Galveston, auiet at 8r net receiDts 534 hales: Norfolk. nuct ai oc net receipts 1,103 Dales; Balti more, nominal at 9c net rercints 39f) bales: Philadelphia quiet at 8 15-16c net receipts i.vaa Dales; tsoston, quiet at 9c net receipts 74 bales: Savannah, dull at 8 3-16c net receipts 1,487 bales; incw urieans, steady at y-l6c net re ceiDts 2.418 bales: Mobile, easv at 8n net receipts 373 bales; Memphis, quiet at o y- ioc net receipts o4 Dales; Augus ta, quiet at tsc net receipts aai Dales; Charleston, auiet at 8c net receipts oau Dates. r r 1 FOREIGN MARKETS. By Cable to the Morning Star. Liverpool, April 16, noon Cotton, business moderate at easier prices. American middling 4 18-16d. Sales to day 8,000 bales, of which 6,400 American; for speculation and export 1,000 bales. Receipts 17,000 bales, of which 15,700 were American. Futures, easy May and June deliv ery 4 48-644 49-64d; June and July delivery 4 53-64d; July and August de livery 4 6-64, 4 57-644 58-64d; Novem ber and December delivery 4 59-64d. 4 P. M April 4 44-644 45-64d; April and Mav 4 44-644 45-64d; May and June 4 47-644 48-64d; June and July 4 52-64d, seller; July and August 4 56-64d, buyer; August and September A KQ CtA A A H a A J. C . Tried Everything without Relief 1 Rest Nisht or Day. Cured by Cntlcnra Remedies. My baby, when two months old, had a hreitin out with what the doctor called eczema He r i .K arms, feet, and hands were each one solid LTai ' tried everythmg, but neither the doctors nor anvthin else did her y could get no rest day or' nivht l tned thft CUTICl 'HA Kk.M faith in them, for I had c, e seen them tried. To mv great surprise, in one cck time after beginning to use the Cuticura Rkmkimks the sores were well, but I 'con tinued to use the Rksoi i - , for a little while, and now She !j af-, fat a babV as yo would like to see. ami ,,. sound as a dollar. I belie vj my baby would havi died if I had not tried Cirri. jura Remeuiin. i Wrj, this that every mother with a baby like mine can feel confident that there is a nv dicme that will cure t lit worst eczema, and that medicine is trie Ci ti , Remedies. Mrs. BETT1E BIRKN1.R, Lockhart, Te.xa Cuticura Eemedies Cure every humor of the skin and scalp of infantv arc! childhood, whether torturing, disfiguring, iuVn'. hurning, scaly, crusted, pimply, or blotchy, with Wsj of hair, and every impurity of the blood, whetbet simple, scrofulous, or hereditary, when the heSi physicians and all other remed ies fail. Parent save your children years of mental and physical sufftrin-' Begin now. Cures made ia childhood are permanent I Cuticura Remedies are the greatest skin , i,.es blood purifiers, and humor remedies of modern tim are absolutely pure, and may be used on th; yo::nt;esf infant with the most gratifying success. Sold everywhere. Price. Cuticura. 50c- 25c; Resolvent, $1. Prepared by the Potter Dk! r, AND CHEMICAL CORPORATION, Boston. 3f? Send for "How to Cure Skin Disease- " i,l pages, 50 illustrations, and 100 testimonials. MPLES, black heads, chapped and i,i y si..., cured by Cuticura Medicated Soat. FREE FROM RHEUMATISM me minute tlic C'nliriirn -Ial 11 riastor relieves i li.-n. .sciatic, hip. kidnev. chest, .ir.l muscular pains and weaknesses. The first and l(n - instantaneous pajn-killing-plasters. ap 1 JJcKW ly we Ir GOLD MEDAL, PAEIS, 1873, W. Baker & Co.'s Breakfast from vvhich 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 cuj). It is delicious, nourishing, strengthening, easily digested, and admirably adapted for invalids as well as for persons in health. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., DORCHESTER, MASS, an 1 DAW9m fu we fr The Cod That Hejps to Curo The Cold. The disagreeable taste of the CQD LIVER OIL is dissipated in Criteria KS P! ri'? 3 Peerc Liver Oi! wins HYPCPHOSPHITES ot? rr.Ts vistid sodv. TLe p.iiient suffering from CONSUMPTION, sufo.vrsrt'js, coi ;:?, cnl:. ok V.vvrit; 15 J SIC ASKS, may late tb . n'-.;j.- wiili rtH much satisfaction ns 1 1 r tak milk. Physicians are iireact-lij-in.T it evm-ywliei-o. It is a pprlVct pnniMon. ;.uil a w-mdeiTul Hosh producer. TaJce no olhcr oc 22 D&Wly we fr. su JAPANESE CURE A guaranteed Cure for Piles of whatever kind or degree External, Internal, lillnd or Bleeding, Itching, Chronic, Recent or Heredi tary. $1.00 a box; 6 boxes, $5.00. Sent by mail, prepaid, on receipt of price. We guar antee to cure any case of Piles. Guaranteed and sold only by J. H. HARDIN, Wholesale and Retail Druggist, feb 1 tf New Market, Wilmington, N: C. flVk e ii-i. niAninnil It rnn d. fENHYROYAL PILLS P-Kh. Wrllnal ana Only wcnninc. vraggisi for UHicucsier jstwh, , Botii RranA in Hail ind Gold meUlllO Iboxea, Mated with bias ribbon. Take tioni and imitation. At DruBKiati, oriMiil 40. In stump for particular., tetimonlH im "Relief for Ladle," tn letter, bj rot urn w n m .i..l.l V.ni l 'aver. Bold by all Local DruggUu. OhIebcsterCemlcalCo.HadUon Kquiirt oc&l Druggliu. Phllada.. i an 30JD&W lv H. L. FENNELL, T.HE HORSE MILLINER. 14 & 16 SOUTH FRONT STREET. Harness, All Kinds. TEUNKS, VALISES AND SATCHELS, BUG GIES, PHJ2T0NS. Wholesale and Retail. 14 & 16 South Front St. ap lSJitf ' Bead This. s UFFERERS FROM RHEUMATISM, NEU ralgta, Sciatica, Lumbago, Gout, dtc, should procure th err tat Oprmnn Anti.Ptinni,tir 'Rinc Positively A speedy and permanent cu're. Thousands of bona fid"-- testimonials. .Price for plain Ring 2.UU; gold piaic. $5.00. Leave t our orders at mar su tf No. 7 South f ront strcei. uu-u-my u-uu; September anrf October 4 58-644 59-64d; October TnA November 4 58-644 59-64d; Novem ber and December 4 58-644 GO-imh Futures closed quiet. BABY ONE SOLID SORE. matic, mwm aw mm w a vm
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 17, 1891, edition 1
2
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