Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / July 31, 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 eept Monday, at $6 00 per year, $3 for six months, $1 60 lor three months, 60 cents for one month, to mail sub scribers. Delivered to city subscribers at the rate ot 13 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. 30 cants for three months. - ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One square one day, $1 00 : two days, $175; three days, $2 60; four days, $3 00 ; five days, $3 60 ; one week, $4 00; two weeks, $6 50; three weeks, $8 80; 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. Ail announcements of Fairs, Festivals, Balls, Hoot, Picnics, Society Meetings, Political Meetings, &c.,wUI be charged regular advertising rates. Notices under head of "City Items" 20 cents per line for first insertion, and 15 cents per line for each subse quent insertion. No advertisements inserted in Local Columns at any price. j Advertisements inserted once a week ia Daily will be charged $1 00 per square for eacn insertion. Every other day, three-fourths of daily rate, Twice a week. wo-hirds of daily rate. Communications, unless they contain important news or discuss briefly and properly subjects of real interest, are not wanted ; and, if acceptable in every other way, thay will invariably be rejected if the real name of the i author s witnneia. nr TVatK Trihutes of Respect Resolutions of Thanks, &c, are charged for asrdi aarv advertisements, but only half rates when paid tor -trictlv in advance. At this rate 50 cents will pay for a simple announcement of Maniage or Death. - An extra charge wilT be made for double-column or , t riple-column advertisements. Advertisements on which no specified number of m- sertions is marked wM be continued "till forbid, at he option of the publisher, and charged up to the date et discontinuance. 1 Amusement, Auction and Official advertisements, cne dollar per square for each insertion. ' Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra according to f be position desired. - . i Advertisements kept under the head of "New Adver tisements will be charged ntty per cent, extra. Advertisements discontinued before the time con . tracted for has expired charged transient rates for time actually published. .1 Payments for transient advertisements must be made in advance. Known parties, or strangers with proper reference, may pay monthly or quarterly, according to contract. All announcements and recommendations of candi dates for office, whether in the shape of communica tions or otherwise, will be charged as advertisements. Contract advertisers will not be allowed to exceed their space or advertise anything toreign to tneir regu ar business without extra charge at transient rates. P;tMnc mnst be made bv Check. Draft. Postal Money Order, Express or in Registered Letter. Only such 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 an advertiser contracts for the caper 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. SSj WILLIAM II. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, N. C. Friday Morning, July 31, 1891 THE SILVER QUESTION. It is said that the Democracy of Massachusetts will fight the -free coinage of silver and it is more than likely that the Democracy of all the Eastern and Middle States will do the same" thing-. These Eastern people, and the people of the Mid dle States have an idea that the free coinage : of silver means a de based currency and what they flip I pantly call "cheap money." I This is not surprising, for in the I politics which involve dollars men's views are generally governed by self "'interest, and men who are as far apart as the poles on other things will come together on that. Hence the Eastern -and Middle State Dem ocrat stands upon pretty much the same ground as the East ern ' and Middle State Republi can on the coinage question, for they ' are both identified with the money centers, and it is to the inter est of those monlyr centers, which are money lenders, to keep the" vol ume of currency down, because the smaller the volume of money is the greater the demand for it, the great- ' er its value and the higher the rate of interest it commands. A surplus of money means a low price for the . use of it, just as a surplus of wheat, cotton, or any other product of the farm means a low price for these. The money lenders put their money upon the market to get as much out of it as they can, just as the wheat or cotton growers put their wheat and cotton upon the market to get as much out of them as they can. There is no party in that, it is cold blooded business. The money-lender has no hostility against silver because it is silver, He is not fighting it on that account, but because the free coinage of sil ver would increase the volume of . currency to an extent to which he would not. want to see it increased If some great prolific new gold field were discovered which would giye an output equal to or greater than the output of the silver mines, and it was proposed to com an tnat and as much as might be mined, they would oppose that as vigorously as they are now opposing the free coinage of silver. . lhe West and the South want free coinage for the very reason that the East and the Middle States do not want it, that is because it will - make money more abundant and interest lower. They are money borrowers , while the East and the Middle States are money lenders. What benefits one injures the other, what puts money into the pockets of one takes it out of the pockets of the other, and when you touch the pock et you touch the average mortal in a very sensitive place.. 1 As a matter 6i fact the silver question and all financial questions are not party questions but questions of a sectional and class character; sectional because it . is the money- lending against the money-borrowing section, class because it is the money lending class against the money-borrowing, classes. We don't mean to say by this that there are no money-borrowers in the Middle States or the East. There are, of course, but they can get the use of money, all they want of it, in ordinary times, for from four to six per cent, per annum, while the South ern or "Western borrower has to pay from ten to twelve, and sometimes as high as eighteen percent., so that the Eastern or Middle States bor rower is not interested to; the ; same extent in having a larger volume of money as the Southern and Western borrrower is. There is money enough for him, and he can get all he wants of it at a rate pf interest which he can afford to pay. .. ' We do not say there are; no money lenders in the South and West. There are, and generally,! we think, it will be found where they take any I interest in the matter and express themselves that they arefdisposed to aoree with the Eastern and Middle States position on this question, although they are not worrying over it, for with free and unlimited coin- orro it umiiM a Inn or timp hefore - " - e -J - - the volume of currency became sui- ficiently large down in this country or in the West to hurt them, MINOS MENTION. A dispatch from Des Moines, Iowa, to the New York Times, says the desertions from the Republican par ty have become so general in that State that the leaders have become alarmed and are out to their wits ends to conjure up some plan to check them. One cause of the de sertions is the endorsement bv the Republican convention of the pro hibitory law, which is not and never has been popular in the eastern counties, which are largely populated by Germans who regard this law as an infringement of their personal -liberty and an offensive interfer ence with their social customs. An effort is- being made to pla cate and reconcile this element by sending men among them to assure them that if Mr. Wheeler be elected Governor he will not veto a bill re- pealing the prohibitory ; law, and at the same time they are sending other agents into the prohibition counties to-assure the prohibitionists that the law will not be repealed. But they are not making much! headway in this, and the indications are that an overwhelming defeat is staring the Republicans in the face and the leaders, who do not fail to note the signs" of' the times, fed r it in their bones. - ? ' Wonderful possibilities have been predicted for the new metal alumi num, which is incomparably light compared with steel, but with far greater strength. It is a -mineral substance found in clay, but abound ing in some kinds of clay more plen tifully than in others. The obstacle to its economic introduction into general use as a substitute ; for steel where lightness and strength com bined would be an object, has been the cost of extracting; it from the clay, but this has been overcome to some extent, ana it is now used in a limited way for various purposes. The most important use to which it has been put, which may stimulate to greater effort and to marvellous results, is the building of a boat at Zurich, Switzerland, twenty feet long, five feet beam, propelled by naptha, which proved a success. This is not a very large boat, but for a beginning it will do very well, and it holds out the hope that with the constantly cheapening cost of producing the metal, the day is not far distant when this little pioneer boat will be followed ; by much larger ones. : Son Russell is authority for the statement that Mr. Harrison takes an active interest in Ohio, and that he will do all he can to aid in Mr. McKinley's - election;.. Son 'Russell wishes his Republican j friends to understand that his father realizes the fact that if Mr. McKinley should be elected it will give him a big boost and make him a powerful competitor for the Presidential nom- matian against Mr. Harrison. Sr., and this furnishes proof, according to Son Russell, that his f pa is not governed by selfisness but by his sense of duty. There are a good many unsophisticated people in this country who think that if Mr. Har son, Sr., were governed by a proper sense ot auty and by a due respect for public opinion, he would keep his hands out of that fight and let Gov. Campbell and Mr. McKinley have it out without any meddlesome interference by him But if Mr. Harrison does take a hand in it we shall find out how strong he is in Ohio. It is said that Governor 'Fleming, h of Florida, will withhold Senator , Call's certificate, on the ground that he was not legally elected, and will appoint Mr. Chipley to fill the va cancy. "To" outsiders "it seems that the opponents of Senator Call are making a vindictive and unjusti fiable war upon him. They : fought him for three or - four weeks in the caucus, where the two-thirds .rule prevailed, and neither could secure the necessarv two-thirds. Senator Call's friends were not justified, per haps, in bolting the caucus, but those members who bolted the Leg islature with the hope of breaking a quorum and preventing the election of Call should not complain if they made a miscalculation and their plan failed. Call got a majority of the votes necessary to elect and instead of still persistently fighting him with the hope of preventing his taking his seat in the Senate they should, as gracefully as they know how, ac cept the result and acknowledge that Call got away With them. STATE TOPICS. 1 nomas 1 . ortune. editor of a colored organ in New York, was in Asheville last week when that "Tariff League" convention was held, the object of which was not so much to - w establish a Tariff League, as to freeze out the negro and start a white man's Republican party to be manipulated by Dr. J. L. Mott, ex Congressman Ewart, Pritchard and others, who have been ignored by the Harrison administration. For tune savs that the main reason for calling this convention to meet at Asheville was to get as far away from the colored counties as possible, which would make it difficult for the ne groes to get there in any considerable numbers, in which they succeeded, for he counted among the five hundred persons present about fifteen negroes who modestly took back seats, feel ing that they were neither welcome nor wanted. His remarks, however, after conferring with some of the leading colored men and some of the white men who are opposed to this movement to freeze the colored man out that they will have a lively time before they get through and that when the final tilt comes the colored brother and his white allies will be on top triumphantly dangling the scalps of the other fellows. Senator Pfeffer says that after the People's Party "elect a President, Congress jand the Senate, if the Su preme Court is not with them they will make another." He doesn't say how they propose to do this, whether they will request the Judges ot the Supreme Court to die and make va cancies, or whether they will go in and chuck the aforesaid Judges out the windows and declare vacancies. But by the time the preceding con ditions are filled Pfeffer will be gath ered to his fathers, or if not his head will be sufficiently matured to talk something like sense. Notwithstanding the fact that In- galls has had a good deal of mis sionary work done for him by the farmers of Kansas to teach him the error of his ways, he declares that he is still a , Republican. It could not be expected that a man who has had such wicked associates so long should be thoroughly converted in a short while, and he may never be sumcienny, reiormea to Decome a Democrat. But the day of miracles is not past, and while there is life t.nere is nope, rle talks of visiting the Holy Land. There is no telling what may happen when he returns from that pilgrimage. According to statistics on insanity the proportion of insane persons in me uuneu ataies is one to every 262; in Scotland one to every 574; in agricultural districts of England one to every 820, and in London one to every 400. Insanity has increased rapidly in this country within the past quarter of a century.- If the Republican party were to remain in Power for mother quarter of a cen- tury one-half the people would be driven crazy. : They have got to making a new jcma ot a stomach up in Connecti cut. There is a fellow named Har ris in the town of Shelton, who is provided with one of these, who makes considerable change by swal lowing live frogs. He not only pre forms this feat successfully but puz zles the doctors by successfully digesting them. The boarding house spring chicken has no terrors for him. BOOK NOTICES. Fowler & Wells, Publishers, 755 Broad way, New York, have just issued a valu able little work entitled Vacation Time, with Hints on Summer v Living ; price 25 cents. v' -v-;: -A-.-r ' The Sanitarian for July presents, among; other valuable articles, one on Longevity, which, gives some, remarka ble instance of prolonged life in modern times, one in England of a man who lived to the age of 207 years, who died in 1588. (This was out of a list of 208 per sons who lived to be over 120 years old. This paper holds that the natural life of man is 100 years, and that when he dies within that time it is torn disease or ac cident. Address American News Com pany, New York. In Our Little Ones and th Nursery for August the little folks will find much to interest them in the pleasantly written stories, verses, &c, while there are many pretty pictures, with some humorous ones that will amuse the little ones very muchj Address The Russell Publishing Company, 86 Bromfield street, Boston. A Little Irish Girl is tne title of an in teresting story, by the "Duchess," pub lished by P. F. Collier, 563 West Thir teenth street, New York. Price 50 cents, "A considerable portion of The Forum, for August, is devoted to "Russia and the Jews," treating of the relation of the Jews to the Russian Empire and of their treatment by JRussia. This is fol lowed by a number of papers on home and foreign subjects by well known writers. Published by The Forum Pub lishing Company, Union Square, New York! In the North American Review, for August, Prof. Goldwin Smith throws 'New Light Upon the Jewish Ques tion," and Hon. Chas. A. Dana furnishes "Some Unpublished History" of the war between the States. There is a full list of contents in addition to these. Address North American Review, No. 3 East Fourteenth street. New York. CURRENT COMMENT. The Russian Czar drinks to the prosperity of France, but does not mention the Republic. In this he shows that unlike Tom Reed he is not a Republican Czar. Phil. Times, Ind. ' Mr. Riley, the entomologist of the Department of Agriculture, has been matting himself unneces sarily prominent by sending out offi cial circulars in which he dexterous- ly inserts an advertisement ot a nozzle he has patented to destroy insects. Uncle Jerry Rusk ought to turn one of those nozzles on Riley. N. Y. A aver User, Ind. The freeze-out tactics of the Linseed Oil Trust, which have re duced the price of oil from 62 cents per gallon last November to ol cents, in order to discourage compe titive production, may still be car ried further in order to accomplish the! end in view. In 1886 oil was sold down to 39 cents a gallon, and afterward gradually advanced to 62 cents. The increase of duty from 25 cents per gallon to 32 cents by the McKinley act will, enable the Trust to send up prices to 70 cents per gallon as soon as it shall have broken down or swallowed ,up troublesome competitors. Philadel phia Record. ORDERING A STEAK. He Knew the Place and Could Tell Just What He Wantea. Minneapolis Journal. 'he waiter came to the table for the third time. Will you have your steak- plain, sir?" he asked. "That's what I said ten minutes ago. "Yes, sir. Have it well done?" "That's what I told you." ''Yes, sir. All right, sir. Have it extra thick?" VThat was my order." "All right, sir." Then,!as the waiter started to go, the customer straightened up and called him back. f You forgot one thing," he said. 'Yes, sir." ("I'll also have it served." f'What, sir?" f 'Oh, that's all right. I know the place. You have, good meats here. You have them rare, medium and well done, you have them tender, you have them plain and with trimmings, but it's only about once in three hours that yon have them served, and I'm particular to have mine that way. Now go ahead. He got his order in three minutes. POLITICAL POINTS. ! Ingersoll thinks the Farmers' Alliance is a nightmare. : As be must know the wonderful things sometimes accomplished by dark horsed the colo nel should give this lact more consider ation. Phil. Times, Jud. The Billion Congress means, according to a careful computation, that Reed and bis gang spent S19 for every hour since the creation ot the world up to the present time. Secretary Foster can't help regretting that they didn't made it an even 820, lor the credit of the Billion Dollar country. Phil. Record, Dem. j Some Republican politicians indulge in a derisive smile when told that the "campaign of education" is in full progress. The know well enough that the present high tariff is an unne cessary burden, but are hopeful that the masses will not una it out until some time after the next Presidential election. In other words, they take the masses for. asses. A. Y, Herald, Ind. Read advertisement ol Otterburn Lithia Water in this paper. Unequaled for Dyspepsia and all diseasesSiof kid ney and bladder. Price within reach of 1. r PERSONAL John Sherman is the only re maining United States Senator who sat in that body during Hannibal Hamlin's term in its chair. Queen Victoria's daughter, Princess Christian, employs a woman as ner pnysician wucu iicr uaves uuu- i t ? i i ble her. Her attendant at sucn times is a well-known specialist, Dr. Julia Maitland. The late Leslie F. Morgan of London, England, left $250,000 to be distributed in four equal shares among the poor or any deserving charities of Philadelphia, bt. Louis, Chicago ana San Francisco. 1 The estate of the late Senator Hearst has been inventoried at $8,700, 000, '. which is all in possession of his widow. The San Francisco -Examiner belongs to his son, William R. Hearst, and is said to be a paying property. Philip George d'Epinois is per haps the most remarkable Waterloo survivor. He was born in 1794, and still discharges the duties of burgomas ter in his native village of Epinois les Binche. . The Chevalier d fcpinois was one of the civic guards who weicomea Leopold I. to Belgium sixty years ago. Leander Richardson, the editor of the Dramatic News, is one of the most conspicuous figures on upper Broadway in the evening. He is 6 feet 3 inches' in height and weighs 280 pounds. Richardson is one of the few men who never forget or desert a friend in trouble. His hatred of enemies and he has as many as the ordinary strong minded man is as bitter as his regard for his friends is strong. W. E. Curtis, chief of the Bu reau of American Republics at Wash ington and head of the Latin-American section of the World's Fair, is a short, stocky brunette of amazing push and energy, and with a confidence in his own resources which has carried him to the front row of financial success. He is a prime promoter, and has a genius for organization which Secretary Blaine has put to good use. Ad Ice to fllotners. b or Over Fifty 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? 11 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 energj 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 Sypup " A Little Girl's Experience In a Light house. Mr. and Mrs. Loren Trescott are keepers of the Gov. Lighthouse at Sand Beach, Mich., and are blessed with a daughter 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 "handful of bones". Then she tried Dr. King's New Discovery and after the use of two and a half bottles, was completely cured. They say Dr. King's New Discovery is worth its weight in gold, yet you may get a trial bottle free at R. R. Bellamy's Drugstore. t Furniture! Biggest Slock EVER IK THE CITT. BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS AND THE VERY Lowest Prices. COME, 8EE AND BE CON VTNCED AT SnzLoecL & Co., 8. K. Cor. 2nd and REarltet Sts., jT 12 tf WILMINGTON. N. C. . NEW MATTRESSES Manufactured to Order. OLD MATTRESSES ; Renoyatei and Re-made j W. Bl. Cumming. N. B. MOSQUITO NETS FOR SALE. ! iyl4tf ST. JAMES HOTEL, GOLDSBORO, N. C, "REFURNISHED AND REFITTED, NEAT -- ana ciean. First class in every respect. Rates $2.00 per day. F, L. CASTEX, Proprietor. na 11 tf Frog Pond QHILL AND FEVER CURE, THE SURE p for Chills. Also the greatest Tonic and Liver emulator on earth. Price 60c a bottle. I will refund the money every time it fails to cure. J. H. HARDIN, Drusaist, jy 23 tf ' Wilmington, N. C. Mattresses I Mattresses ! 1 W. M. CUMMING. All kinds MATTRESSES Manufactured. Old jy89tl , ones Renovated and Remade. COMMERCIAL. W I L MINGT ON MARKET. STAR OFFICE, Tuly 30. SPIRITS TURPENTINE. Market firm, with sales of receipts at 32 cents per gallon. ROSIN Market firm at $1 20 per bbl. for Strained and $1 25 for Good Strained. TAR. Firm at $1 60 per bbl. of 280 fis., with sales at quotations. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Distillers quote the market dull at $1 25 for Hard, and $2 15 for Yellow Dip and Virgin. COTTON Nominal , Ordinary. Good Ordinary. . . Low Middling Middling. Good Middling... 4 cts $ ft 6 3-16 " 6 15-16 " 8M RECEIPTS. - Cotton. ......... ..... 8. bales Spirits Turpentine.. 315 casks KOSin ... 53,175 DDIS Tar . 176 bbls Crude Turoentine 83 bbls DOMESTIcTaARKETS. Lily Telegraph to the Morning Star.l financial. New York, July 30. Evening. Sterling exchange quiet and firm at 485487J. Commercial bills 483 485. Money steady at 1K2K per cent.; last loan at 2 per cent., closing offered at 2 per cent. Government se curities dull but steady; four per cents 117: four and a half per cents 100 bid. State securities dull but steady; North Carolina sixes 124; fours 97; Rich mond and West Point Terminal 10; Western Union 78. commercial. New York, July 30. Evening. Cotton steady, with sales to-day of 508 bales; middling uplands 8c; mid dling Orleans 8 7-16c; net receipts at all U. S. ports 781 bales; exports to Great Britain 1,629 bales; exports to France bales; to the Continent 20 bales; stock at all United States ports 229,264 bales. Cotton Net receipts bales; gross receipts 237 bales. Futures closed firm; sales to-day of 107,100 bales at quotations: July and August 7.67 7.69c; September 7.807.81c; October 7.93 7.94c; November 8.068.07c; December 8.16a8.17c; January 8.268.27c; Febru ary 8.378.38c; March 8.478.48c; April 8.578.58c; May 8.678.68c; June 8.77 018.78c. Southern flour dull; common to fair extra $3 654 35. Wheat unsettled and lower and less active, closing steadier; No. 2 red 98c$l 00 in store and at elevator; options moderately active, closing firm atc down on July and . Il4c up on other months from yester day; No. 2 red July 98c; August and September 98Mc Corn irregular and dull, closing steadier; No. 2. 70J71c at elevator; options opened MMc up, tell lc on large receipts, rallied . lc on frost reports and closed firm at J c over yesterday; Tuly 70c; August 68Mc; September 66Mc Oats dull, lower and weak; options dull and firmer; July SSc; September 32Mc; spot Mo. 2, 3839Wc; mixed Western 3740c. Hops quiet and easy at 1520c. Coffee options opened steady and unchanged to 10 points down, and closed steady and unchanged to 10 points up; July $17 00 17 15, August $17 3517 50; Septem ber $15 3015 50; spot Rio dull quiet and steady. Sugar raw dull but steady; refined dull and weak. Molasses New Orleans quiet and firm. Rice quiet and firm. Petroleum dull and lower; refined at New York $6 706 85; Philadelphia and Baltimore $6 556 80; in bulk $4 304 35. Cotton seed oil steady and quiet; crude, off grade. 2529c Rosin dull and weak; strained, common to good, $1 351 40. Spirits turpentine dull and easier at 35436c. Pork ac tive and firm. Peanuts steady; fancy hand-picked 4 Jfc 434c; farmers 2 3mc. Beef quiet and easy. Cut meats quiet; middles firm and quiet; short clear September $6 97. Lard quiet and firm; Western steam $6 876 90; city $6 25 6 35; options August $6 84; Septem ber $6 976 98. freights to Liverpool strong; cotton 5-64;d; gram 3d. Chicago, July 30. Cash quotations were as follows: Flour nominally un changed. Wheat No. 2 spring 89 89c; No.2 red 89c Corn No. 2, 61c Oats No. 2, 31c. Mess pork, per bbl., $11 37K11 40. Lard, per 100 lbs., $6 62U6 65. Short rib sides $6 85 6 90. Dry salted shoulders $5 906 00; short clear $6306 40. Whiskey $1 17. The leading futures ranged as follows opening, highest and closing: Wheat No. 2, Tuly 89, 89, 89c; December 90M90K. 90M, 90c Corn No. 2 July 62. 62, 6262c; September 5758. 58. 57C Oats No. 2, July 32, 32, 31 c; September 27. 8, 28MC Mess pork, perbbl Sep tember $11 45, 11 55, 11 52; October $11 52, 11 60, 11 60. Lard, per 100 lbs September $6 72, 6 75, 6 75; October $6 85. 6 87, 6 87. Short ribs, per 100 ids September $6 97, 7 02, 6 W; uctoDer 57 07, 7 .15, 7 10. Baltimore, July 30. rlour active and unchanged. Wheat southern strong; Fultz 93c$l 00; Longberry 95c $1 00. Corn southern steady; white 7778 cents; yellow 7273 cents. COTTON MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. July 80. Galveston, quiet at 7 ll-16c net receipts 34 bales; Norfolk, quiet at 7c net receipts 155 bales; Balti more, weak at 8c net receipts bales; Boston, dull at 8c net receipts 98 bales: Philadelphia.auiet at 8c net re ceipts bales; .Savannah, quiet at 7c net receipts 205 bales: New Or leans, firm at 7c net receipts 181 Dates; moduc : easy at 7c net re ceipts 12 bales; Memphis, nominal at 7c net receipts 52 bales; Augusta, dull at 7c net receipts 27 bales; Charleston, quiet at 7c net receipts 50 bales. FOREIGN MARKETS. By Cable to the Morning Star. LIVERPOOL. Tulv 30. noon Cotton. business moderate at unchanged prices. American middling 45d. Sales to-day .iv.uuu oaies, 01 wnicn o,cuu were Ameri can; lor speculation and export 1,000 Daies. Keceipts o.uoo bales, of which 2,400 were American. Futures opened with better feeling and steady August and September de livery 4 20-64, 4 19-644 18-64d; Sep tember and October delivery 4 25-644 24-64d; October and November 4 30-64 4 28-64d; November and December de livery 4 33-64a4 32-4d: December and January delivery 4 85-64d; January and February delivery 4 88-64d; February t 7 r W 17-644 lfu,, July and August 4 17-644 lCS ld; gust ar d September 4 18-644 ini i ocpi.cn: ;.er ana uctober 4 24-64d LiT ; :Octobcr and November 4 28-64H V er; November and December 4 82-Md iT5 ers; December and January 4 S? 4 35-64d; January and FebTnJL ery 4 37-64d, seller; February and Ma u 4 39-644 40-6.id. FuturesTwA suiet. D1SAGHEE as to who first discovered the Chloroform by which we make ourselves insensible to ain but people everywhere know that the aent that Driveo Pain Out of us was discovered fifty years ago by Perry Davis, Its appropriate name k and it is counted as r.n dispensable requisite in m tLe home the palace or the 1 ut the wide world round. For sale It Kills Everywhere. Pain. jy 2 3m toe & nrm ch d - i. Aafa mv stsrtmt fin W T rinnol n D cl. If not for iale in your place ask yoni dealer to send for catalogue, secure the ngency, ma trei in era ior yon. S7TAJkJ Q SUBSTITUTE, .gj WHY IS THE W. L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE CENMEN THE BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FOR THE MONEY? It U a seamless shoe, with no tacks or wax thread to hurt the feet; made of the best fine calf, stylish and easy, and because tee make more thoes of this grade than any other manufacturer, it equals Land sewed shoes costing from $4.00 to $5.00. SE uu uennine nana-sewed, meanest can frJ shoe ever offered for $5.00; equals French Imported shoes which cost from $3.00 to $12.00. CA OO Hand-Sewed Welt Shoe, fine calf, stylish, comfortable and durable. The best shoe ever offered at this price ; same grade as custom-made shoes costing- from $6.00 to $9.00. au police siioej f armers, tiauroaa men wWi and Letter Carriers all wear them: fine calf. seamless, smooth Inside, heavy three soles, exten sion eage. one pair wiu wear a year. CO OO fine calf no better shoe ever offered at wAi this price: one trial will convince thoso who want a shoe for comfort and service. CO US and 92.00 Working-man's shoes w A are very strons and durable. Those who have given them a trial will wear no other make. RftVe' 9.uu and 91.7a school shoes are UJ O worn by the bovs everywhere: they sell on their merits, as the increasing sales show. griine3iUU nana-sewea snoe, Dest haUICB Dongola, very stylish; equals French imported shoes costinefrom B4.00 to SS.C Ladies' 2.50, 82.00 and SI. 75 shoe for Kisses are the best fine Dongola. Stylish and durable. uantion. see tnat w. l ixmgias' name ana Price are stamped on the bottom of each shoe. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. ' H.iVON GLAHN, Wilmington, N. C jy 1 5m su wo fr GOLD MEDAL, PABI5, 1873. W. Baker & Co.'s eakfast Cocoa 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 Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., DORCHESTER, MASS. an 1 DAW?m , u we fr DUCRO'S """I It is highly recommended by the PhysWansofw A REMEDY f br LUNG DISEASES; Sives 8TREHGTH to OVERCOME YELLOW, TYPHOID AND MALARIAL FEVERS- Its principal Ingredient, FtmEMEAT, te k f ormnlated with medical remedies, giving 1 Vritsl able strmnlatiar properties; tov?gPSS,r loroea without rationing tne tu8wu"L v V, E. FOVGEBA Sc. CO., AGENTS, W. V jy 29 ly in OMYERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. The Next Term Begins Sept. 3. Entrance Examinations, Sept. 2. Tnilion $30 per term. Needy young men of talen and character will be. aided with scholarships loans. Besides the general courses of study, offer a wide range of elective studies, there are conn in Law, Medicine and Engineering. For catalogue &c, address the President, wlMcTON. iy26tf ChapelHilUNii- MATTEESSES, MOSS, HAIR, COTTON, EXCEL SIOR, STRAW, SHUCK. W. M. CUMMING. 1 flPiSy r auu jyiarca delivery 4 41-o4a. jy29tf
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 31, 1891, edition 1
2
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