Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Sept. 8, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. THE MORNING STAR, the olden daily news paper in North Carolina, Is published daily except Monday, at $8 00 per year, $3 00 tot si months, $1 60 for three months, 60 cents for one month, to mail sub scribers. Delivered to city subscribers at the rate of, 1 cents per week for any period from one week to one ; year. - . - THE WEEKLY STAR is published every Friday morning at $1 00 per year. 60 cents for six months, 80 : cents for three months. ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One square one day, $1 00 ; two days, $1 75 : three days, S3 50; four days, $3 00; five days, $3 50; one week, $4 00; two weeks, $6 60; three weeks, $8 50; one month $10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months: $24 00 ; sut months, $40 00 ; twelve months, $60 00. Ten lines of solid Nonpareil type make one square. All announcements of Fairs, Festivals, Balls, Hops. Picnics, Society Meetings, Political Meetings, &c.,wilJ be charged regular advertising rates. j . ; 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. Advertisements inserted once a week in Daily will be charged $1 00 per square for each insertion. Every other day, three-fourths of daily rate. Twice a week, wo-thirds 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, they will invariably be rejected if the real-name of the author s withheld. Notices of Marriage or Death, Tributes of Respect Resolutions of Thanks, &c., are charged for as orai aary advertisements, but only half rates when paid for trictly in advance. At this rate 60 cents will pay for simple announcement of Maniage or Death. An extra charge will be made for double-column or triple-column advertisements. Advertisements on which no specified number of in sertions is marked will be continued "till forbid," at - he option of the publisher, and charged up to the date of discontinuance. Amusement, Auction and Official advertisements, one dollar per square for each insertion. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra according to the position desirea. : Advertisements kept under the head of "New Adver tisements will be caused nttv per cent, extra. . Advertisements discontinued before the time con tracted for has expired charged transient rates for time actually published. Payments for transient advertisements must be made In advance. Knows 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 foreign to their regu ar business without extra charge at transient rates. Remittances must be made by Check, Draft, Postal Money Order, txpress or in Registered letter. Only such remittances will be at tne risk ot tne publisner. Advertisers should always specify the issue or issues thev desire to advertise in. Where no issue is named the advertisement will be inserted in the Daily. Where. an advertiser contracts tor tne paper to be seat to nun during the time his advertisement is in the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to nis address. 3Ixe omhiQ Jtar By WILLIAM H. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, N. C. Tuesday Morning, -Sept. 8, 1891 FIGHTING FACTIONS. The dispatches of Saturday an nounce a rupture of the Farmer's Alliance of Iowa, and the organiza tion of a new Alliance in opposition to the old one. The faction which has organized this new Alliance is led by boomers of the People's Party, from which it seems that politics is at the bottom of the trouble. The dispatch further informs us that "the fight between the two Alliances will henceforth be hot." 1 There is nothing surprising in this to those who have kept tracic of the Alliance movement since it has begun to tan gle up in politics. There are rival factions in Kansas, in Missouri, in Iowa, ih Georgia, Alabama, Missis sippi and South Carolina. These have not all taken on the organized shape as in Iowa, bat they will if the political departure be forced, for there are Alliance' men, and lots of them, who from the beginning have deprecated and protested against making the Alliance directly or indi rectly the annex of any political party. But there are others, like Senator Pfeffer and Representative Simpson, who act on the presump tion that this is what the Alliance was organized for, to elect them and cute, thrifty gentlemen like them to office. When politics was first injected into the Alliance we predicted that if this new departure was encouraged it would result eventually in the de struction of the Alliance. We gave reasons for entertaining this belief. As a non-political organization, pur suing the objects for which it was originated, it might and would last for many years, and embrace within it a large majority of the farmers of this country, - North and South. It was doing much good, and would, if its design were adhered to, do much more. There is not a farmer who joined it who might not be benefit ted by it, while the farming industry would reap inestimable benefit from it.. . . Before the political schemers bob bed up in it and proclaimed the new dispensation there was nothing- in the organization to create dissatis faction or contentions, and harmony and the best of feeling prevailed throughout the fraternity, every one of whom was inspired by the com menable desire to advance, elevate and better the condition of the in dustry of. the farm. ' These were noble aims, and they were directed by men of intelligence and big brain, men who were not trying to better their own fortunes simply but to aid and advance the cause of the exeat industry to which they and those associated with them belbneed But when the Alliance In Conven tion at Ocala adopted a series of "demands" (which in a regular po litical organization would be called a platform) and when" the third par ty was projected and- Alliance men began to take sides for or against the demands and the third party, then men with little or big ambitions came to the front the foundation was laid for personal rivalries and jealousies. for factions' and contentions for su premacy and for the disintegration that will as inevitably follow these as night follows day. There is not the cohesive power in the organiza tion to hold together very long un der such a strain. The honest, sensible men who are in the Alliance, and it can show a pretty full list of both, who joined it to be benefitted by it and to bene fit others, failing to see where the benefit comes in except to the few -hustlers who are fortunate enough to be elected to office, will get tired electing them and get tired of the Alliance, too, if it is to be used as an ngine to elevate selfish or ambitious men to office. The Farmers' Alliance controlled by farmers, seeking to promote the in terest of farmers, is a good thing and has in it the elements of growth and durability, but. the Farmers' Al liance, If controlled by politicians seeking their own and not the far mers' interest, has in it the elements of decay and destruction. The Iowa incident furnishes a pertinent and striking illustration of this as sertion. MINOR MENTION. Ever since the McKinley tariff went into effect Republican high tariff organs have been trying to make the people believe that the tin-plate industry has been perma nently established in this country. As a proof of this Mr. Neidringhaus, of St. Louis, (ex-Republican Con gressman,) the Norton Brothers, of Chicago, and a few other alleged manufacturers of tin-plate, have been, with grand flourish, sending little samples of their product around the country as texts for high tariff organs and high tariff orators to build editorials and speeches on. It is not denied that a common quality of tin-plate is made and has been made in this country for twelve or fifteen years, but it is denied that the finer grades of tin-plate such as is imported into this country is made except in small quantities for exhibi tion - and political purposes. The efforts of the press have utterly failed to find a single factory whjere the better qualities of tin-plate have beeh made or attempted to be made as a commercial article. The manuf ae on ture ot roofing tin has been carried in Pittsburg for years, but it is sim ply iron sheets dipped in tin, a very simple process and very different from the process involved in making tin-plate proper, which is as as fol lows: First To buy bars of pic iron or pie steel. Second To roll them in large sheets. Third To pull them apart. Fourth To pickle them in a vat. Fifth To anneal them in cast iron boxes. Sixth To roll them in single sheets to guage and smooth. beventh To trim them. Eighth To anneal them again. Ninth To shear, them. Tenth To dip them in a vat which contains palm oil and pure tin, in the case of bright plates for canning pur poses, and a mixture ot tin and lead, m the case of roofing plates. Eleventh lo take them out of the dipping vat and to allow them to drain off. Twelfth To rub them in bran, and then wipe them with a sheepskin from which the wool has not been taken off. Thirteenth To assort them. Fourteenth To count, weigh and box them, ready for shipment. - There are yet in this country no establishments for the rolling of iron or steel for tin plate, and all of the plate thus far used, with the excep tion of a small lot which Mr. Neid ringhaus says was rolled at Chatta nooga, has been imported, as has also been the block tin used. Tin plate may be made in this country some day, but it is not going to come as a result ot the McKinley tariff. In the meantime the tin con sumers pay $8,000,000 more for their tin than they did before the increased tin tax went into effect. H. G. Hester, Secretary of the Cotton Exchange, at New Orleans, reports the number of cotton mills in the Cotton States at 340. The number reported last year was 336, of which seven were burned. - A num ber of these mills have been consoli dated, but deducting the consolida tions and adding the new mills, there are now 340 in the cotton growing States. The greatest gain both in mills and spindles has been in Geor gia, North and South Carolina, The consumption shbws an increase of ten per cent, over the previous year, while several of the States consume as much as the entire South did ten years ago. These facts and figures strikingly illustrate the progress yof the cotton manufacturing industry in the South. , But we have heard no talk of reducing the wages of operatives as the Massachusetts man ufacturers say they have been com "pelled to do. . - - ; : The colored Republic of TJiberia does not seem to be a very desirable place of residence foe the colored man who expects to earn his living by honest labor. Geo. B. Parks; the Atlanta colored man who with his family went there last May expecting to find it, as it had been represented to him, a 'most inviting country, found it just the reverse, and after a few weeks experience left it in dis appointment and disgust, and ship ped for home arriving at New York Saturday with $60 left out of $1,250 that he startecTwith. He ays the very worst people in the so-called Republic are the negroes from this country who have settled there, many of whom make their money by making slaves of the natives whom' they treat in a most tyrannical and cruel manner. As an experimental colored Republic Liberia has proved a signal failure. Senator Cullom, of Illinois, the gentleman who will not "throw a Presidential nomination over his shoulder" if it comes his way, has just returned from Europe and brings along with him the cheerful intelligence that in his "travels through England, France, Germany, Belgium and Holland-he found man ufacturers getting ready to pull up stakes and remove their establish ments' to America." , He didn't deem it necessary to inform the public how many he saw "getting ready" to do this, or what sort of manufacturers they were. When these Protection ists visit Europe, especially cm the eve of s. political campaign, they always make cheerful discoveries, and bring back something to help the high tariff orators along. They have been thus bringing foreign manufactories over here for twenty five years. There is a screw loose m the ma chinery of a town where a "woman of refinement" is compelled to don male attire and pick up a few pen nies to support herself and family by selling papers on the street. That's what Mary Thomas, alias John Thomas.was doing inPhiladelphia the other day when she was arrested, and taken to the calaboose. Accord ing to the Philadelphia paper which reports the case she is "a woman of considerable refinement, and told her story in a quiet but positive manner which convinced the magistrate of its truth." Little incidents like this show that in our large cities, and even in small ones, those humani tarians who go abroad seeking ob jects of benevolence, might find some under the shadows of their own homes. CURRENT COMMENT. The announcement that Min ister Egan is still alive will not be good news to the Administration. They were encouraged by his silence to suppose that he had placed a dyna mite bomb on his own heel and then kicked himself. But even that course would not have removed the dis grace of his appointment.. Y. Advertiser, Ind. Of the 43 Democratic Alli- ance men in the Tennessee Legisla ture, 34 are against the sub-treasury scheme, and of 46 non-Alliance Democrats, 44 are against it. This will be about the proportion in Con gress when the next attempt is made to push the thing through, and yet good men are being defeated all over the South because they will not accept a scheme impossible of reali zation. Columbia State, Dent. -It is probable that the Chil- lian war will develope another chap ter in the history of our "greatest living statesman," Mr. Blaine. The firm of Flint & Co.j who backed Balmaceda in his struggle for con trol of the country, is said to have very close relations with the Secre tary of State, and there is very broad intimation that the conduct of Mr. Pat Egan. our minister has been in fluenced by nirate contracts. Mr. Blaine suffered severely from an in vestigation of his South American transactions some nine years ago, and possibly the next Congress may be just mean enough- to investigate him again. Indianapolis Sentinel, Demr' WEATHER CROP BULLETIN For the Week Ending Friday, Sept. 4, " : 1891' ; t " - - Central Office, Raleigh, N. C. The reports of correspondents of the Weekly Weather Crop Bulletin, issued by the North Carolina Expe riment Station and State Weather Service, for the week ending Friday, September 4th, 1891, show that al though slightly better , weather has prevailed no improvement in croDS has taken place. The early part; of the week was decidedly too cool, the temperature reaching, the normal only during the last few days. The excessive rains have ceased, but light showers,' which were quite unneces sary, have fallen. The ram-fall was heaviest in the Eastern District and least in the Western, otherwise the same conditions have prevailed gen erally over the State. Cotton con tinues to shed and is affected by rust. Opening very slowly. Corn was not much damaged, but saving of fodder andhav not orozressing very well. Tobacco curing progressing rapidly; tne yield not promising tu uc quite as good as expected, l he prospects are now for a few days of ; rainy weather and lower temperature; The present condition of the staple crops is as follows: ' Eastern District Cotton, 69; corn, 83: tobacco, 82. . Central District Cotton, 73; corn, 88: tobacco. 79. Western District Cotton, 78; corn, 87; tabacco, 84. For the State Cotton, 73; corn, 87; tobacco 82. (130 reports re ceived, representing 60 counties). H. B. Battle, Ph. D., . Director. .. C. F. von Herrmann, . Weather Bureau, Assistant: CORSETS GO UP IN, SMOKE. ; Snores of Women Take Them Off at a Revival Meeting in Canada. A few weeks ago, a dispatch from Kingston. Ont.. savs. the Free Methodists began a series of revival meetings' in Sydenham, and made many ' converts. Women seemed particularly anxious to be gathered into the fold. As the number of converts increased the excitement grew, and the meetings, which were hela in the town hall, grew so noisy that complaint was made to the authorities, and the revivalists were notified on Tuesday that they would have to hold their meetings else where. Nothing daunted they left the place, after putting out scouts to advise their friends where the meet ing was to be held, and adjourned to a large vacant lot in the edge of town. Here they were addressed by J. F. Fraiser, a revivalist, who sailed into the prevailing mode of female dress, and said women are born beautiful and die mishapen because of the wearing of corsets. Frasier is an earnest and powerful speaker. and his words created great excite ment among the women present. "lhrow on the accursed inven tion," he cried, "throw it off and go to God as you left Him! Burn them rather than burn yourselves in ever lasting fire ! - ihis suggestion struck a respon sive chord, and he had hardly ceased speaking when an enthusiast piled up material for a bonfire and applied a match. It was a weird scene the dusky evening, the crowd of relig ious enthusiasts, quivering with ex citement-surrounding a fire which shot up long tongues of flame. .bum tnemr nystencany cnea a feminine voice in the crowd; and, pushing and panting, a young wo man of twenty-five forced her way to the centre near the bonfire. She was tugging at her dress. There was a sudden gleam of white shoul ders in the firelight and she flung her corset into the flames saying she would die as God had made her and not as she had made herself. Her example was contagious; and in less than half an hour not a woman in the crowd wore a corset, and nothing remained in the blaze hut a mass of grotesquely twisted corset steels, amid which the flames play fully .-.flickered. The excitement was so great ana tne nervous strain so intense that several women grew faint, but they had burned their cor sets and were happy. The Free Methodists consider the revival a great success, and talk of carrying the war into the btates. POLITICAL POINTS. One State in this Union can be counted upon as solid for President Harrison Vermont. But it required great sacrifice and enormous oratorical enort. JV. Jr. Advertiser, Ind. If it were not for the necessity ot raising a big campaign fund, the Re publicans would let the high tariff go to pot. I here is hardly a Republican any where who doesn't know what a hum bug a high tariff is.--Louisville-Courier Journal, JJem. The Iron Age says : "A move ment is on foot to organize an associa tion among the manufacturers of corru gated iron roofing, the. object being to hx and maintain prices. This is an other attack upon the building trades, under cover of the tariff duty of $21.33 per ton upon imported corrugated sheets. It the movement should succeed there would be rich picking for the Jnew lrust. Fhtl. Kecord, Dent. Maj. McKinley does not find the tariff question so interesting as he thought he would when he began his campaign in Ohio, and he is therefore devoting the greater part of his speeches to the silver question. He is telling the farmers that if they don't change their demands they will be carrying the South American dollar in their pockets. The farmers, however, Ido not seem to un derstand him. At least they do not ap plaud his allusions to the South Ameri can dollar. Savannah News, Dem. Advice to Btotnera. t or Over Fifty Years Mrs. Winslow s Soothing Syrup has been used by millions of mothers for their chil-. dren while teething. Are vou dis turbed at " night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth? it 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 Sybup " - PERSONAL. 1 Thft new President of the new Royal Scottish Academy, George Reid, is the leading portrait ; painter of , Scot-; land. ' :-v -' V Mr. Proctor, who is to succeed Mr. Edmunds m the Senate from, Ver mont, is a Dartmouth graduate and about 60 years of age. - ::. '. The.wife of Lieut. H. D. Borup of the United States Legation in Paris, is nnet of the verv few : ladies who can claim to have made the ascent of Mount Blanc. Mme. Barrios, the beautiful and wealthy widow of a President of a South American Republic, may give ner nana in marriage to a memoer oi tne is-ngnsn nobility. C. F. Lummis. that indefati gable explorer and traveler, has., discov ered a region filled with big game in the Flagstaff country of the San Francisco mountains. : , The Saale Zeitunc savs that ex- Prime Minister Bismarck is afflicted' with drowsiness, and is losing his memory. Age is rapidly telling on the ex-Chancellor. Oscar Wilde has a weakness for white kid gloves and Turkish cigarettes. He is reported to be at work on a book that will deal with the "study ot Chris tianity from the outside. The late Duchess de Croy-Dul men was one ot the last of the grand dames of the second empire. She was a beautiful woman, and in the forest of Ardennes she was famous as a huntress. Father Horstmann, chancellor of the arch diocese of Philadelphia, has been nominated as successor to the late Bishop Gilmour of Cleveland. He M a native of Philadelphia and 48 years of age. Mrs. Tenriie C. Nixon, of Tennessee, is professor of rhetoric and belles letters in Newcombe College, New Orleans. She is a clever newspaper wo man and has done much editorial work for southern papers. . Electric Bittern This remedy is becoming so well known and so popular asto need no special mention. All who have used Electric Bitters sing the same song oi praise. A purer medicine does not exist and it is guaranteed to do all that is claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all diseases of the Liver and Kidneys, will -remove Pimples, Boils, Salt Rheum and . - rr - . i otner anecuons caused oy impure blood. Will drive Malaria from the system and prevent as well as cure all Malarial fevers. For cure of Headache, Constipation and Indigestion try Elec tric Bitters Entire satisfaction guar anteed, or money refunded. Price 50 cents and $1.00 per bottle at Robert R Bellamy's Wholesale and Retail Drug btore. Foreclosure Sale. State of North Carolina, New Hanover County. Superior Court. The Bank of New Hanover and J as. H. Cbadboora Jr.y Executor of Geo. Chad bourn, deceased, vs. W. P. Canaday and wife Marie E. By virtue and in pursuance ot a decree ot tne lienor Court of New Hanover Co.. made at Ami, t -r ll. 1891, in the above entitled cause, the undersigned duly appointed Commissioner by said decree will sell at public auction, for cash, at the Court House door in Wilmington. N. C on Monday 88th day of Septem ber, 1891, at 18 o'clock M., the following described real estate, situate in said City of Wilmington. First 1 ract: Beginning at a point in the nortnern tide ot the old New Bern road, where Rnsseli's Branch crosses said road, running thence north 70 degrees and 50 minutes east, one chain and 75 links, thence north bo degrees and xo minutes east nre chains, thence north 81 degrees and 86 minutes vest four chains, thence north GO degrees west six chains, thence soutn t4 degrees west live cnains to Kusseu s Brancn, thence southwardly up said branch to the beginning. Second Tract Beginning at a point in the eastern line of Ninth street, 132 feet northwardly from the northeastern intersection of Queen and Ninth streets, and runs thence eastwardly and parallel with Queen street 165 feet, thence northwardly 66 -feet, thence westwardly 165 feet to the eastern line of Ninth street, and thence southwardly 66 feet to the beginning; be ing western half of Lot 4, Block 81. J. I. Commissioner. August 21st, 1891. an 22 80t GreatRedaction in Spring AND - Summer Goods. IN ORDER TO MAKE ROOM FOR MY ZFaOJL Goods l will sell for the next thirty days my entire stock of SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS at greatly re duced price. A complete line di Alpaca Lttats and vests. 100 White and Fancy Vests, worth S1.25 for 65 to 75 cents. 100 pairs Silk and Wool Pants, worth $4.50 to $6.50 for $3.50. 150 pairs All-Wool rants, wortb $3.50 for S2.W. A large line of Gents' Underwear, worth 75c to 11.25 for 40 and 75c. The largest stock of Over Shirts on the market from 25c to $2.50. We ask you to look at our stock of Men's and Boys' Straw Hats for less money than yon have ever seen then. We have left a few nieces Straw Matting, which we offer for 12$ to 25c. Respectfully, SOL. HEAE ap 21 tf 20 Market St., Wilmington, N. C, OLD MATTRESSES EEN0VATED -AND- RE-iYlADE. W. M. "GUMMING. N, B. "Health, as well as comfort, demands sep 5 tf a good bed." Stop at Hotel Nicholson, Washington, 1ST. C. 1TUATKD IN THE HEART OF THE BUSI- tw ness nart rtf th tnn and rvmvMiaat fs r ; M " - n) WHiviUUk 4 VS VVUT rooms, gas lights and electric bells. First class iin every respect. Omnibus meets all boats and trains. GEO. SPENCER. MaoagBT. , fep2g nanawwslceyHablt8 cured at hoae with Alltrmin. flnnVAPnaK. ' 1 1 il ticulars sent FREE. ' Atlanta, Ga. Office 10U Whitehall 8t. dec S8 D&Wly tnjhut COMMERCIAL. W It, M I NG T O N M ARKE T. STAR OFFICE, Sept. 1. ' SPIRITS i TURPENTINE. Market steady at 84 cents per gallon. Sales at quotations.. J - ROSIN Marker firm at $1 05 per bbU for Strained and $1 10 for. Good Strained. TAR. Firm at $1 80 per bbl. of 280 lbs., with sales at quotations. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Distillers quote the market dull at 00 for Hard, and $3 00 for Yellow Dip and Virgin. COTTON-Nothing doing : Ordinary. . . .v. . . .. . Cts $ Jb Good Ordinary 6 7-1Q " " Low Middling. ...... 7 3-1 0 " " Middline IK . " Good Middling;,...,. S " RECEIPTS. Cotton ..cr. ...... Spirits Turpentine. ....... 158 bales 131 casks 605 bbls 206 bbls 11 bbls Kosin..... .. Tar.............. Crude Turpentine. COTTON MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. September 7 Galveston, firm at 8c net receipts 4,398 bales; Norfolk, firm at 8 JjC-net receipts 177 bales; Baltimore, steady at 8c net receipts 75 bales; Boston, dull at 8 ll-16c net receipts bales; Philadelphia, holiday net re ceipts bales; Savannah, dull at 83-16c net receipts 4,892 bales; New Or leans, auiet and steady at 8 4c net re ceipts 5,092 bales Mobile, firm at 8 7-16c . a.-ts 1 . r 1" 1? net receipts vo Daies; wempnis, nrm at 8o-net receipts 79 bales; Augusta, firm and active for higher grades at 8c net receipts 286 bales; Charleston, firm at 8c net receipts 879 bales. FOREIGN MARKETS. By Cable to the Morning Star. Liverpool, Sept. 7, noon Cotton steady with fair demand. American middling 4d. Sales to-day 8,300 bales; speculation and export 1,000 bales, Receipts 1,400 bales, all of which were American. Futures opened steady but since be came weak September and October de- liverv 4 58-64(S4 57-64d; October and November delivery 4 63-644 61-64d; November and December delivery 4 53- 64, 4 52-64, 4 61-64, 4 63-64, 54 62-64d; December and January delivery 4 55 64. 4 54-64, 4 53-644 54-64d; January and February delivery 4 58-64. 4 56-64, 4 57-64, 4-56-64, 4 55-644 54-64d; Feb ruary and March delivery 5 11-64, 5 10' 64, 5 9-64 5 8-64d; March and April de livery 5 13-64, 5 12-64. 5 11-64, 5 10-64 &5.9-64d. Tenders of cotton to-day 200 bales new and 100 old docket. 4 P. M. September 4 53-644 54 64d; September and October 4 53-644 54-64d: October 4 58-644 59-64d; UO tober and November 4 58-64a4 59-64d; November and December 4 64-64 4 64-64d; December and January 4 51-64d, seller; Tanuary and February 4 53-64d, value; February and March 4 55-644 56-64d; March and April 4 58-644 59-64d. Futures closed nearly steady. V" rt,v "WE ABE IN IT, AND YOU MAY BE IN IT; BY BUYING BEDS AND ALL KINDS OF FDBHI- TOBEOF OS. The Best $25 Oafc Suit IN THE STATE, 10 PIECES. Onr stock is n earing completion, and in oqdei to give oar customers a good showing we have rented the two Stores of Burr & Bailey, on!Second street, where -we can always have plenty of duplicates. Onr place southeast corner Second and Market is now full, all mree stores. We cannot, and will not be undersold. A nice line of RUGS and MOSQUITO NETS cneap. & Co. au4tf GOOD . FLOUR, 2,100 BABBELS IRo Coffee, 160BAGS. FreMt. Airy Butter Eyery feet LOW PRICES BY TTATiTi & PEARS ALT., an 20 D&W tf No. 7 South Water St S. W. SKINNER CO. Machine and Iron Works. FOUNDRY, BlaACKSMITH AND BOILEB SHOPS. WILL MAKE ANDIREPATR BOILERS, EN GINES, MILLS, AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY. Having new and first class works, with modern tools, are prepared to undertake any class of work. SatisCaction guaranteed, . ' : A fnll stock of Machinist's supplies always on hand. CONTRACTS TAKEN FOR . . BUILDING STEAMBOATS, SCOWS, etc. " .- sep 5 tf Again at Our Post jAND READY TO SERVE OUR CUSTOMERS with our; very best skill and promptness. i. PETERSON BROS.,. Photographers, sep 6 D&W tf , - Hi Market street ll 1 " 'i''lr:.lal ? Oft In the stilly night When ChcUra MorLa'a found m "Pain Killer- fixed ine-right Nor wakoaad those around m. Most OLD TEOPLE are friends of Pzrry Davis and often its very Lest friend h.,,.,-. for many years they have found it friend in need. Accidents y -nerally i cevt In the daytime, while Choleia Morbus and such troubles usually culminate ?t night To get rid of any such pain befor it be comes an ache, use PAIN KJLLEfi. Buy it right now. Keep it near you' Use it promptly. For sale everywhere. It KILLS Paik. jy 8;3m toe & nrm A Planters Experience. fflty plantation is 1 k snstlRf W trlet, where fever and agca prersilcd. I employ 150 lipncla frequently hult of them xrere sick. X was nearly dl The result was taarrcllona. My men eoame strong? end liearty, and I hava Btulnofurtbnr trouble. VTitta these pills, I would not fear to live ia any Iffimp." E. BIVAl Kayon Sara, 1 Sold Bireryrhere. Office, 89 & 41 Park PIsce, New York. mar 19 D&W ly th sa tc A Household Remedy FOR ALL BLOOD asbSKIN DISEASES 0 Botanic Blood Mm It. r.,m SCROFULA, ULCERS, SALT IL UUIM RHEUM. ECZEMA, every ' form of malignant SKIN ERUPTION, be sides being efficacious in toning up the system and restoring the constitution, when Impaired from any cause, its 1 almost supernatural healing properties Justify us in guaranteeing a cure, li directions are to! lowed. SENT FREE ILLUSTRATED "Book of Wonder. " BLG0D BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga ian 13 IyD&W sa tn ti mm APOLLO WAS k PERFECT MAN. EBFE6T IB FORM 1 MATCHLESS III WAli v 8o aozloaa er th usiratt tor stalwart men Uui i puny bojiat birth ware pot to deata. Every majr can oa btsuhh I and nOCKOUS In all retpectt, wftiiaift pai n n m n iuunu mm imuLUj offering from KEBVOtTS Dfr mtm tint or Fallinx Man hood. Physical Ezecaaaf, Mental Wwawrw 0-wmmA TiaVl Aft mMlt. OF ww Vl J r U (liu w . an.VtDOAVlt. UTTiTRrlfl. CflJL M restored to PERFECT HEALTH ud la VAVT 0 VTSPAT.Ttnr a flTEOHw MEV, the Pride nd Power of Kt-tioM. We claim by years of practice by "KOHOPOLY OF SUCCESS"' in weav ing all Diseases, Weaknesses ana AmieUona ot Men. Testimonials from 50 States and Territories. OUR NEW BOOR oWS It while won eaa. Foil Explanation! for HOME IEEAT. BtBKT. Ton eaa be FULLY RESTORED ai Thonaandl bTe been by ns. Bead onr tettimonlala. Addreas at oncu IE MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO. HX my 27 V&Wlj tu th sat WS trll! pav thdr &ovo reward fr r"y faso o. Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick rieaditciie. Indigestion. u)n etipation or Ocwtiveness wo cannot enre west 3 Vegetable Liver FTls. when ths d!rc:U.n- -irortne.iy complied with. Tntr are purely Vegetable, and never tail to giro satisfaction. Suir ' O'.te.: Lbjo boies. containing Pills, 25 cents. Bowr.ro of conntertcKS and imitations. The prenuiiie manufactured omy 3 SKF JOW C. WEST COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL Sold by ROBERT R. BELLAMY, N. W. Cor. Front and Market streets, feb 1 D&W ly Wilmington, J. DUCRO'S I jMAIdi.Mtiy many s ihA OKTroiTrinTlflOf Pari38 ATONICforTYEAKPEES01SS,aiid A REMEDY for LUNG DISEASES; gives STEESOTH to OVERCOME all attach oi YELLOW, TYPHOID . MAI ADIal FEVERS. Its principal Ingredient, T- E. roVGEBA. afc CO., AGENTS, I f 5y2oly Jri . COMMERCIAL COLLEGE of KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY " Cheapest and Be Bvrlnen CoUeg S"f "lt. i nioHMT Xwasi at WoaLB S Exposition. 10,000 Qr i r V I M CTAW U V . jsu.mesft. 13 teaonero employee. "u"ii" .sun). olHdiusToltioo, Btaaonery and Board, aboot Enlef bow. Graduates auoces(Bl. Spoolal department lor imi". 1,000 itndcnu in attendant tft-past year. Forcireulsr". y WILBUR R. SMITH, Pres't. LEXINGTON. 22 4t sat as X tlLlJ VOpuiV;Li c i to Balsam of Copaiba, v Cubeba arid Injections. Mt ) I same diseases wimoui, iwj venience.: SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS dec 16 " Refrigerators at Cost. QURING THE NEXT FEW WEEKS wiU sefl balance stock o Refrigerators at actual cost. Enll stock of Hardware and House FurnishinS goods. Cane Mills. . , , mvtcR. sep 6 tfi ALDERMAN & FLANNSK. n
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 8, 1891, edition 1
2
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