Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / March 16, 1892, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. -r TTt CT A T ' aUh fllW paper in North Carolina, is published daily except j Monday, at 6 00 per year, $3 W for trix months, $1 60 I or three month, 60 cents for one" month, to mart sud- cribers. Delivered to city subscriber! at tne rare oi 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).-ne square one day, $1 00 ; two days, $1 75: three days, 2 60; four days, $3C6; five days, 3 60: one week, $4 00; wo weeks, $6 5b; three weeks, $3 60 ; one month, $10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months ,$2400 ; six months, $40 00; twelve months, $60 00. Ten lines of solid Nonpareil type make one square. - - -All announcements ot fairs, festivals, uaiis, .Vni'n Rrw-ipMr Meetmp. Political Meetices. &c., will be charged regular advertising rates. , - - Notices under head of City Items" SO cenu per line for first insertion, and 15 cents per line fcreacn subse quent insertion. ... -. No advertisement inserted in Local Columns at an) price. ehlVd 00 ro-re for each insertion. Ever, Advertisements inserted once a week m Daily will ue the? day, three-fourths of daily rate. Twice a wee, wo-tnrras ot caiiv rate. Commtmications, unless they contain important news r discuss briefly and properly subjects of real interest, a nnr onA if MTVTlttMf. ill CVCTV Other WY, thev will invariably be rejected if the real name of the I author s withheld. -; . t-:r:..r .- Notices of Marriage or Death, Tributes of Respect Resolutions of Thanks, &c, are charged for as ordi 'i aary advertisements, but only half rates when paid for strictly in advance. At this rate 50 cents will pay for simple announcement of Marttage or Death. An extra charge will be made for donble-column or riplfrcolumn advertisements. Amusement, Auction and Official advertisements, ne dollar per square for each insertion. ' " Advertisements to follow reading-matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra according to the position desired. Advertisements kept under the head of "New Adver tisements" will be charged fiftv per cent, extras - Advertisements discontinued before the time con i racted for has expired charged transient rates for time ctuallv published. " V Payments for transient advertisements must be mace -i si4vanr:. Known narties. or stransrers with proper reference, may pay monthly or quarterly, according to contract. - - -' , . . i All announcements and recommendations of canai daies for ofBce, whether in the shape of communica tions or otherwise, will be charged as advertisements. Contract advertisers will not be allowed to exceed " ' heir space or advertise anything foreign to their rern i r business without extra charge at transient rates. . Remittances must be made by Check, Draft, Postal Money Order, Express or in Registered Letter. Only tuch 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 paper to be sent to. him during the time his advertisement is in the proprietor i will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his address. : - - ;lXje 33tl0inmig gmX. Br WILLIAM H. BERNARD, WILMINGTON, N. C. Wednesday Morking.Mar. 16,"1892. WILL TAMMANY SUPPORT HIM? Tammany is supposed to favor the nomination of Senator-Hill for the Presidency. The Tammany leaders do not like Cleveland, and they will doubtless use all their influence to defeat him for a nomination, and will fight him to the end, while there is any hope of carrying their favorite through.- . - : ; : Their undisguised opposition to Cleveland has given rise to the sus picion thoughout the country that in the event of his nomination some of these leaders would bolt, and the re sult would be the. knifing of Cleve land and the defeat of the party in the next Presidential election. It is this feeling, which has been gaming ground since the last election, which has led Democrats, even among these many who greatly admire Cfeveland, to believe that it will not be judi cious to nominate him. Recognizing this sentiment and the ground there is for it, the New ,York Times, a warm champion of Cleve land and an. uncompromising foe of Hill, publishes a lengthy article - to show that Tammany will- support Cleveland if nominated, and that the opposition to him iu that organlza . tion is not as strong now as it was in 1884, when it made its hard fight against him in the National Conven tion, and when he was nominated in spite of it. It enters into the history of the origin and progress of the i trouble between Cleveland and the . Tammany leaders, and how it culmi nated in unrelenting war against him both as Governor and as candidate for the Presidency. To sum it up, they couldn't control him, and there fore they resolved t6 destroy him. . Some Of those leaders are leaders no longer their places have been taken by others who have no personal grievance against Mr. Cleveland and : consequently are not. inspired by the vindictive antipathy that John Kelley and the men he controlled felt, but , some of them still live and are yet -potent factors in New York politics. The Times quotes Sachem Crocker, Sachem Cockran and others as to the - attitude of Tammany, and their declarations that it "will support the ; nominee of the convention whoever . he- may . be." As a Democratic organization S Tammany cannot do otherwise, and whether these gentle men aire sincere in their declarations or not they would not be foolish , enough'to declare before hand, when they expect to go into the Dem i ocratic convention with a candidate . - of their own,- that they" would not, support the nominee of the con ven- - tion, if he ' wa's not a man whose T ; nomination : pleased . them. This would be to discredit themselves in ' - -advance as Democrats and to go into5 the convention as bulldozers. r It is not so much a question as to - whether the Tammany leaders will support Cleveland if he is renomi nated for we do not think there is any doubt of that, with the excep tion perhaps of Mr. Dana, of, the Sun, (who never supports anybody he don't like, and does support anybody he, does like, regardless of his politics,) . " but the kind of support they wonld ,ve him, whether it would be the cordial, vigorous suppbrt that works for an election or bnly-the negative, teen - yOUr - handS - Off Kind, WhlCH lets r. j . . .. , , . contents itself a with - letting - him severely alone! The Democratic can dtdate who carries-New York at the next election,- mnst have a united party behind him, and not only- the formal, negative support,' but the. positive, support of itsjeaders. . The Times points to the fact that Cleveland triumphed over the Tammany opposition in 1884, and therefore takes it for granted that h .could do it again in 1892, when the nnnnc:tinn hac lntt much nf the AS- r" . - -- - oeritv which-characterized it - then. r j . -. . But this is not saying much nor- ad vancing any I conclusive evidence that Cleveland's nomination would insure the State to the Democracy, for the triumph in 1884 was -the nar rowest kind of an escape .from de feat, an escape for which the party is perhaps indebted to the. brg three lVs blunder of the impetuous but indis creet Burchard, whose antipathy, to "Rum, Romanism, and - Rebellion' got away with his judgment and political sense, if he ever had any. A little plurality of .1,047 in a State which is safely.; Democratic by at Ieast20,000 on a full Democratic vote is not. much of a victory upon which to claim popularity, nor to prognos ticate future r victories, especially when that little, 1,047 plurality "was followed four; years later by an ad verse plurality of 13,002. and some of its organs, are doing all tney can to create tne impression amongst the rank and file of the party that Cleveland is not a Democrat, and while some of them declare they will support him id the event of his nomination, l is it to be expected, even if . they be sincere, that they can command the enthusiastic co operation ot their following tor a man whose j Democracy they have been laboring zealously to discredit? There are many of the rank and file who -are actuated- by . no selfish motive, who may not be able to comprehend j how, the men who de nounced a man one day as an enemy to the party can support him the next day as the standard bearer of the party. There are some people who cannot change their opinions nor their attitude so readily and this is the unknown quantity which would make the nomination of Mr. Cleve land, or of Mr. Hill either, a very risky business as matters now stand, notwithstanding the;, assurance of prominent Tammany men that they will support the-nominee of the con vention. While there is a sentiment against Cleveland in Tammany there is quite- as decided a sentiment against Hill outside of it. MIS0R MENTION. All reports as to the probable with drawal'of : Mr. Cleveland from the Presidential race, or doubts as to his position -'on that question, are re moved by the letter to : Gen Bragg, of Wisconsin, published in tfie"5f ar yesterday.- While he had intimated heretofore that he- would accept a nomination if tendered, holding that a citizen should. obey the voice of his fellow-citizens when called upon to serve them, this is the first direct ut terance from him to that effect. It is ndw.no longer a question that Mr. Cleveland is in the field, and as Sen ator Hill is in it - with both feet, the conflict between these; two dis tinguished leaders cannot be averted. Mr. Cleveland's skill in writing has long been xrecognized; His happy faculty for compressing a great deal within narrow space is not equalled by any other public man . of the day. This letter .'is not an exception in that respect. Perhaps it might have been somewhat better and more politic if it had been more so in that particular part of the letter where he deprecates personal effort and self-assertion 4n - seeeking suqh nign . position, ana contends that candidates for. the Presidency should be chosen by the people "as directly as is consistent with, open, fail and full party organization and method.". In both of these, positions he is emi- Jnently.co now are, the former will be construed as a knife-thrust at Senator Hill (who had previously done, a little prodding) while the latter'is . a bull's eye shot at the convention of February 22d. Neither is calculated to - draw the party lines in that State any closer. Whether the letter makes him any stronger in New York, which may be doubted,; or not, it .will make' him stronger among the people of the country at . large, and especially among the independent, non-partisan voters, upon whom he will -largely depend for an election if nominated. If the election .were to be decided by the popular , vote, (without the agency, of the Electoral College, we believe 'that; Cleveland could beat' any, man . that might be ' nominated on either side, for we consider him a - stronger man to-aay man ne was m 1884, when elected, or in 1888, when defeated, although he received near ly 40,000 more votes than he - did when elected. V :': - Senator, Hill has met with a very warm greeting" trom' tne "zsoutnern people on his trip to Jackson,! Mis- sisstppi, wnicQ is as it should Defc . we trust he . will- be cordially greeted everywhere, for, regardless of; his candidacy for the Presidency or indi vidual opinion on that subject, Sena tor Hill -has been and is a friend to QrtMW ,n TO1I 'kfih ..mw . . w- w . , Southern people. There never was a time in his public career that he did not contend. that the I South was en titled to all and every right that any other section of the Union was en titled to, that the Southern States were sovereign States, their people sovereign people, and that they alone had iurisdiction over their own affairs. . He emphasized this in a public speech when the Force bill was pending . in ; Congress, when he declared that we would have no country and .no- prosperi ty if such " an infamous bill was passed, and that he would veto any appropriation tor tne world s Fair, until all measures to degrade the South were dropped. A North ern Governor, with such a record. who talked that way .when the South's liberty and prosperity were in jeopardy is entitled not only to fair but generous ; and distinguished treatment from the Southern people. While we have - honest doubts whether, in the present condition of affairs in New York, his nomination for the Presidency would be judicious, we have no sympathy , with; the in discreet zeal for another which would misrepresent, belittle or abuse him, nor have we the shadow of a doubt that if nominated - and elected he would make a rattling good Dem ocratic President and that he would leave the Democratic party of the country stronger and, the , sections mote united when his term endd than when : it began. This is our opinion of David B. Hill. - The Republican high tariff men claim that under the increased duty on shoddy and other substitutes "for wool the importation of thes& things has declined from $1,235,772 in 1890 to $58,627 in 16911 This is true, but the cutting off of foreign shoddy and I other substitutes by the increased tariff," which was intended to be pro hibitory, has Stimulated the manu facture of shoddy in this country. where there are" several large manu factories engaged in making it and which find sale for all or more than they can make. ; In increasing the tariff woollen rags were exempted, and these are still largely imported. If wool was free no one would object if the tariff on r- shoddy, &c, ' were kept high, but with a high' tariff on wool the only effect is to change one fraud for another and give us home made instead of imported shoddy, while the buyer of "woollen" goods is cheated all the same. . - . CURRENT COMMENT. There is no ground for be lieving that the. American 'Eagle screamed so much in the Chilian matter that she finds herself afflicted with a sore throat when Bering sea matters present themselves. Wash. Star, Ind. ' s ' . - : ; The desire of the administra tion for an international ruction grows as convention time and elec tion time draw near. It would seem as if the Italian and Chilian affairs should have already - made the Fal staffian fighters at the head of our government! suniciently ;, ridiculous without any further bluster atEng-: land. Indianapolis ' Sentinel. Dem. i The inevitable seems to have befallen Secretary Blaine, and he will be compelled, in order to save life itself, to abandon . his post and go Southward for rest and relaxation, from official S cares. r The Maine statesman is but one of many who, neglecting Nature's imperious warn ings, have burnt themselves out in the public - service. Phil. Record, Dem. ... v - From all directions where workers of iron are employed come news: of proposed or accomplished reductions in wages. . This is not the feast to which the workingman was invited when he was implored to vote for "Harrison ; and Protection" and against "Cleveland and Free Trade" In order to prevent wage reduction and assure himself of more butter for his bread. It he. shall learn in this day of calamity that the ups and downs of tariffs do not; control; the ups and downs of wages the lesson will have been dearly learned, but it will be worthy all ' it cost. It may then be more "difficult to fool the workingman out of his vote in 1892 than it" was in 1888. .Pvk7. Record, Dem. " ". . ' . ' ; . :v' ' -: . ' - Demosthenes, the " Grecian orator, cured his stammering by having his mouth full of ; pebbles,; and -many' are the - modern . orators : who have cured their hosrseness by an occasional dose of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. , , ;;;t gf JJEIIORY SOMETIMES DOES. Recollection That Do Not Always Inspire Wft.b Happiness. . ' Chicago .Tribune. t J - Much has been written concerning the pleasures oi memory, but no one, it seems has cared -to present the other side of the subject. BuMhere is another sideto.it...; . : , l?- . ; Remembering when you are 'half way to the opera -.that, you have, left your box ticket atbome,uponjrour dressing table, and, at the same time, jrecollecting that -the overture was what:, you " wished especially to hear, is an incident not calculated to add to the pleasures .of memory. After you have sent a bouquet to JPW laUV- "C WllQ a DOie miimaHng - 1 ! - ?! ' m . . tnat the flowers were the finest that could be purchased,; but' that you cared not a cent for expenses, it adds nothing to your pleasure to remem ber that the florist's card on which was written "25 cents, collect,"; was thoughtlessly permitted to accom pany the bouquet. ;..: ; v;v..t; . When a tired papa who has walk ed 3,169 times around the room with a : restless baby; finally quiets the child and is: himself j ust about to drift' away into bewitching dream land he derives no happiness from the suddenly engendered recollection that he forgot to lock the hall door and to put the cat out . ,When a bachelor " getting out of bed on a cold morning decides to keep on. his night-robe till the room gets warmer and then thoughtlessly hurries away to breakfast,- where people smile slyly and. significantly; it does not add to his joy to remem- ber that be did not make the change in the apparel he contemplated. When we are telling some man of the grand and brilliant schemes we are working whereby we are coining money so fast that we scarcely know what tp do with it it is a real source of annoyance, rather ; than: pleasure, to call to mind the fact that we are owing him a ."fiver" .which we bor rowed of him a. long ' time ago, but which we cannot pay because we have not got that much ready cash to our. name. The pleasures of memory? Bah ! They are all a poetic myth. Th.e miseries of memory come nearer hit ting the bull's-eye of truth. We re member too much and at the most inopportune times. Let us bury the past and go away and forget where we made the grave. . ' POLITICAL POINTS. Give us a free tin-plate bill next, Messrs. Tariff ' Reformers of the House. .There is no feature of the Mc Kinley act more burdensome and iniqui tous than that designed to add a dozen little tin gods on wheels to the other protected monopolists. N. Y. World, Dem. 4 ... ' , It is said that Mrl Hill's' total lack of opinions on the two absorbing questions of the day. checks his boom. down South. The people down there would like to see a translation into plain English of that obscure if terse saying of his. "I am a Democrat.' It has a beau tiful sound. . But what does it mean? N. Y. Com. Advertiser, Dem. We notice that the Republican party in our State, which has been in a state of innocuous -desuetude for the past sixteen years, has become encour aged by the threatened split in the Dem ocratic ranks and is again organizing its shattered forces. Their leaders announce that for the first time in long years they see an opportunity in prospect for pout ical recognition, and intend to be ready td take advantage.-of it. On Friday night this .work , was : commenced in Colombia, and it will be pressed in every county in our btate. Columbia Register, v., pERSONAL Tames G. Fair Is said to be in danger of death from fatty degeneration ot tne heart. I John Hogan, who died in St Louis recently, laid out the site of Chicago in 1836. I Henry Arthur Jones, who wrote "The Middleman" and "The Dancing Girl" is a long-haired Englishman, short in stature, pleasant as a conversational ist and chock full of quaint and curious ideas. .- . j The chief kard (commander-in chief) of the army of the Sultan, ot Morocco, now on a visit to his family in England, is a Scotchman, son of the late Surgeon General McLean of the British army. 1 Considerable light is shed upon Mr. 1 Ingalls declination of a salary of $10,000 a year for editing a newspaper in Kansas by the subseqnent disclosure -f the fact that the paper has not yet been started i" Mrs. Terhune, better known as Marion Harland, will visit Richmond in a few days, and . while- there deliver lecture on "A ; Gentleman of Olden. Time" for the benefit of the Daughters of the Revolution. ; Mai. Gen. O. O. Howard lost his right arm at the battle of Fair Oaks. and it was to him that Gen.' Phil. Kear ney, who lost hts left at at Chapultepec made the famous remark, 'Howard, you and I will have to buy our gloves in part' nership." ". . ! - A very curious feature of the library of Dr. Edward Everett Hale, p: Boston, is a series of market baskets filled with - pamphlets ' and suspended from the ceiling in such a. manner that they can be raised or lowered by means oi a pulley and aclothes line. . ' . i A cup fashioned out of a cocoa nut shell has recently been presented to ex-oov. Lee, oi Virginia. and an inter esting history; attaches to it. The cup was made by a Confederate soldier dur ing his imprisonment in Fort Delaware and was given to Gen. StoneWair Jack son, who kept it until his death,. when it passed into the hands of the man who made it, to be sent by him to Gen! Lee. BacIUen' Arnlea Salve. The ben balve in the world tor Cats druises, Sores. Ulcers, Salt - Rheum Fever, Sores, Tetters,: Chapped : Hands Chilblains. Corns.,and all Skin Eruptioas and positively cures Piles or no ' pay is required. It is guaranteed to give perfecfc satisfaction, or xaoney refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale bv Robert R.. Bellamy, Wholesale and Reuil Drue Ristt. - " r - - - , QUEER CHINESE FISHING. Shrimps Abalone, Squld and Sea Moss , Gathered on the . Paclfle Coast. , ' - Washington Star. . : - 'There are ' some very curious fisheries carried on by the ? Chinese on the Pacific coast," said an officer of the United. States fish commission to si Star writer. - "One of the most remarkable is the catching of shrimps, which -is an- important industry in San . Francisco bay - and adjacent waters. These little crustaceans, upon being captured, are tkken ashore and -boiled in" big iron vats after a ; rude fashion; holes being scooped put of the side of a steep bank for fireplaces, which are built up with stones. " After: the shrimps have remained in boiling water for ten minutes they -. are spread out to dry upon i bare ground. One such shrimp yard at. Hunter's Point is about fifteen acres in extent The Chinese use brooms shaped some what like hoes for spreading the shrimps and to turn them at the "re quired intervals. " . - "After being thoroughly dried by exposure to the sun for about five days the shrmps are crushed by be mg ; trodden on by Chinamen in wooden shoes. This process loosens the meat from the shells, which lat ter are removed by shaking in a bas- ket or by i passing them through a crude fanning mill. 'Both meat and shells are then packed in sacks for China, where the meats are sold for food and the shells are, disposed of as a fertilizer tor tea plants, rice, and so forth. All classes, of people -in China eat the meats, although re garding them as inferior to the na tive shrimps, which are comparative ly scarce? and proportionally dearer. Both meats and shells, are fed to fowls with remarkable egg-producing results. ' . "After each day's shrimp fishing, part of the catch is taken alive to the San Francisco market, where the shrimps sell for ; about 10 cents a pound. All that . cannot be sold at short notice in the city or country are taken back to the hsnmg camps and put through the process of boil and drying for shipment abroad. The export trade is entirely controlled by Chinese merchants, who forward the shnmds to Hong Kong as a dis tributing center. -In 1B88 such ex- portations amounted to 796,660 pounds of meats, valued at S76,9o6, and 3,842,200 pounds of shells, valued at $38,462. So you see that this little fishery is not such a small affair. f "Another interesting fishery prose cuted by the Chinese on the Pacific coast is for abalones. These beauti f ul univalve mollusks are found along the rocky! shores at low tide, clinging to the rocks above, the water-line. Each shell is slighly lifted, so that the fisherman can thrust, a stick un der it and pry it off; but, if alarmed, the animal shuts down its valve, so that it can only be removed by breaking it to pieces The meats are taken from the shells and boiled on shore in vats made of sheet iron bhells and meats are then packed in sacks and forwarded to San Francis co, whence most of the meats are exported r to China and the shells shipped to France, the latter being highly valued for their .beautiful mother-of-pearl. - r "Squid are caught in great qu an tities by the Chinese and cured for export. 1 No salt is used for the purpose. They are simply dried in the sun, and, after being thus pre pared, are packed in bundles and covered with matting, each package containing about 135 pounds. . They are sent by steamer to San Fran Cisco, where the bulk ot them are forwarded to the Sandwich Islands and China. Sea moss is also collect ed for food by. the Chinamen, being dried and. packed in sacks." - j. .- a.avic flloinert. . . . - tor Over Fifty Years Mrs. Winslow s Soothing. Svrup 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 ? li so send at once and get a bot tle of "Mrs. Winslow's Soothinc Sv rup" for Children Teething. Its value is incalculable. 1 It will relieve the poor iitue - sunerer ; immediately. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures Dysentery and Diar rhcea, 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 forsalebyalldrug- gisis wrougnout tne wona. race twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing 5YBUP " .! ; - . v ;- ; -: ' Specimen Cttei. ; : : a. ri. cjinord. New Cassel, Wis., was troubled with Neuralgia and Rheuma tism, his Stomach, was disordered, bis Liver was affected to an alarming degree, appetite fell away, and he was terribly reuucea m nesn ana strengtn. xnree bottles of Electric bitters cured him. '. Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, 111., had a ,running: sore on his leg of eight year's standing : Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes, of Bucklen's Arnica Salve," and his leg is sound and weU. John Speaker, Catawba, O., had five large Fever sores on his leg, doctors said he was incurable. One bottle Electric Bitters and one box Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured him entirely. Sold bv R. R. Bellamy's Drug Store. t Whatever tends to increase usefulness. by banishing pain"; and suffering will certainly secure notice and approval. We allude to Salvation OiL . t jTR WILL OPEN-.THIS WEEK PATENT Bonnets and Toques. All the leading Shapes. . Felt . Hats, Winers, Birds and Beads. 13, up stairs. xjt. rank's Block, south of Market street, over no. oct 18 tt E. M. STROCK. COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON-MARKET. " STAR OFFICE, March 15. SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market steady at 85 cents:. per gallon; and with sales at these figures. ROSIN Market . firm at 15 per bbl for. Strained and $120 for 'Good Strained." . , ' - TAR-Steadv at tX SO per bbl of 280 lbs. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Distillers quote' the market steady at $100 for Hard; and $1 90 for Yellow Dip -and Virgin,, 1 - PEANUTS Farmers'- stock quoted at 45 to 55 ? cents per bushel of . 28 pounds. , Market quiet. - - 1 COTTON Weak and lower to sell at quotations: Ordinary . . 4 cts 19 lb Good Ordinary.. - 6 15-16 4." 6 11-16 " Low Middling. Middling. Good Middling.. KBCBIPTS. Cotton. ... " 76 bales Spirits Turpentine. . , '. 78 casks 2.507 bbls Kosm.. y . . .. . .'. . . . Tar : ... . 608 bbls Crade Turpentine; . . v 4 bbls DOMESTIC MARKETS. ' ' IBy Telegiapb to tne Morning Sttr.1 . Financial. ' New York, March 15 Evening. Sterline exchansre auiet and steady; post ed rates 486488. Commercial bills 485487.' Money easy at 1K. cls ing offered at 2 per cent. Government securities dull but steady; lour per cents. 117. State securities entirely neglected; North Carolina sixes 124; fours 97; Richmond and West Point Terminal 145f Western Union 89. ' - . . . Commercial. - New York, March 15. Evening. Cotton steady; sales of 646 bales; mid dling uplands 65ic; middling Orleans 1icr, total net receipts at - all United States ' ports 23,833 bales; exports to Great Britain 9,469 bales; to France 2,473 bales; to the Continent 12,761 bales; stock at all United States ports 1.157,612 bales. ,' . Cotton Net receipts bales; gross receipts 7,449 bales, v Futures closed barely steady; sales 180,000 bales; March 6 316.34c; April 6.34 c; May 6.43 6.44c; June 6.536.54c; July 6.63 c; August 6.726.73c; September 6.82 6.83c; Ortober 6.926 93c; November 7.01017.02c: December 7.11a7.12c: Southern 'flour quoted dull ana weak Wheat lower; business moderate;' No. red 99Mc$l 00 in store and at eleva tor and $1 01&1 02 afloat; options closed weak and lc under yester day; No. 2 red March 98c; May 98Jc; July 94MC;. Corn moderately active and lower; No. 2, 47475c at elevator and 4848c afloat: options J3c lowen March 46Mc; May 46Mc Oats aaive and lower; options fairly active but weaker; May. 34c; spot. No. 2. 35 36Mc;; muted Western. 1 341 Coffee options closed firm 'f and un changed; March $13 7013 75; spot Rk quietand steady; No. 7,- 14c Sugar refined firm, with a fair demand; Molasses New Orleans firm and active; common , to - lancy zqskc - - Kice in good demand and - firm. Petroleum steady and, quiet. Cotton seed oil dull and .easy; .crude 24c. i Rosin steady but dull;- strained, common to good, $1 871 42. - Spirits - turpentine steady at 383oc. Jrork in moderate demand and fifm. Peanuts steady; far mers' 258c. Beef steady; beef hams dull; tierced beef quiet. Cut: meats steady; middles dull. Lard . weak and dosed firmer; Western steam $6 57 bid; city $6 15; March $6 587; May $6 62, Freights to Liverpool strong, with a fair demand; cotton 5-82d;.gram 4d . Chicago, March 15. Cash quotations were as follows: e lour demoralized and nominal; ho demand. Wheat No. 8 spring 8Zc; No. 2 red 87Mc Corn No. 2, 38c. . Oats No. "2, 2828c. Mess pork, per bbl. $10 42. Lard, per 100 lbs. $6 30. Short nb sides $5 62. Dry salted shoulders $4 75 5 50. Short clear sides $6 25. Whiskey $1 13. The leading - futures ranged as fol lows, cpening. . highest and closing: Wheat No. 2, March 84, 84. 83c; May 85586. 86, 85&a Corn No. 2, March 38, 38, 38c; May 39 39, 89, 39c Oats No. 2, March 28. 28H. 21c, May 28. 29. 28c. Mess pork, per bbl March $10 35.: 10 47, 10 42; May $10 50, ' 10 62. 10 57. Lard, periOO lbs-March $6 20, 6 25, 6 25; May $6 25; 6 30. 6 80. Short ribs, per 100 lbs March $5 57 5 65. 5 62; May $5 62, 5 70, 5 67. Baltimore. March 15. Mout dull and unchanged. Wheat steady at a de cline; No. 2 red on spot -and March $1 001 00; Southern wheat easy; ruiiz yocoji ua,- Longoerryi 51 uu 1 03. . Corn Southern easv: white 47a 48c; yellow, 4848c. - - COTTON. MARKETS. Br Telegraph to the Morning Star. - : March 15. Galveston, quiet at 6Mc net receipts 3.067 bales; Norfolk, easy at 6c net receipts 873 bales; Balti more, weak at ' 6c net receipts : bales; 'Boston,: weak at 6 13-lic net receipts 502 bales; Wilmington, weak and lower to sell at 6c net receipts 70 bales; fbiiadeiphia, dull at7c net receipts 316 bales; Savannah, easy at 6 15-16c net receipts 1,311 bales; New, Orleans, easy at 6 5-16c net receipts 15, 731 bales; Mobile, quiet at 6 "5-1 6c net receipts 212 bales; Memphis, easy at 6c net receipts 721 bales; Augusta, dull at 6c net receipts 155 bales; Charleston, quiet at 6c net receipts 938 bales. FOREIGN MARKETS. . . .. .. By Cable to the Morninc Star. . .. - Liverpool, March 15. noon Cotton dull with prices generally . in buyers' favor; Am encan r middling 3 d. Sales 6,000 ':J bales; : American 5,500 v bales; for speculation and export 1,500 bales. Receipts 18,000 bales; American 14,200 bales. " , - I - - Futures easy March and April de livery 3 3I-643 30-64d; April and May. delivery 3 32-64d; May and June delivery 3 36-64d; June and July delivery 3 39 64(H July and August delivery 3 42-64d; Atfgustand September delivery 3 46-64 3 45-64d; September and October de livery 3 49-643 48-64d. , . 4 P. M. Cotton, American middling fair at 4d, good , middling ? 3d; mid dling 3 9-16d; low middling 8d; good ordinary 3 3-16d; ordinary 8d 8 31-64d: March and am o March value; April - and May 3 32 64d L ' May : and June 3 35 643 36-Wd T'' and "Jul, a hq Jrt lune August 3 42 64d,'buyer; August 2S September 3 45-643 46-64; SeoterX 3 48-643 49-64d; September and (K" . I - I VW-V1U, V rill 1 f3 I nl firm. , ciosed Wuv ie tu- I J. L. DOUGLAS . Sh S SSI EAR vJO w li J En CENT LEWI EN TBE BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FOR THE HONE? to-hurt thefmaTe of ttTlt taS calf SSS Sawed shoes c6iiigfr4B to ob: nana 55 OO Genuine Hand-setred, the finest calf O7o shoe ever offered for $5.00: eauairnJ import easnoea which cost from $3.00 to 12 00. Ss4& JS-fiWelt ShoeTflne calf. stylish, comfoitable and durable. Thebtit torn-made shoes costing from $6.00 to $oo " V , . i aimers, Kauroaa Men JO and Letter Carriergall wearthemfiSeea!? BATTlleSS. Smooth insiria hum ,V.An 1 UlL CIO oo itne calf; no better shoe ever offered at - v" uuo itBi wiu convince thosa who want a shoe for comfort and service V-Sa. are. very strong and durable. Thorn wk nave given them a trial will wear no other make. BOVS' k,"v.J:?5 iphool shoes are 4m. thfelr merits, as the increasing sales show. ImnnrtMi ahnpa nrMtincfrnm mA fti ts c m tadiea' 2.50, and Si. 75 shoe fori wmocohio iud ucoujiuuiAiuguiti, ovyilSQ aOQ durable. vuviivui Kmj auu.u v wugitts- uaniQ flTifl price are stamped on the bottom of each shoe. J.XX519V 47t wacu uctticm bUDD. villi? vrm XV. 1 DOUGLAS, Br(Mkton,Itfa8Srii!dhy ?- r , tn 1 5m -fr sn we . H. VON GLAHN. 1,000 Genuine Tyler Curtain Desks S2I and S24 Net 8 pot Cash. Tfo. 4007 Antiqne Oak Standard Tyler Desks, 4ft. 61a. Ions by 8ft. In. high. Mice and Dust Proof, Zine Bottom nnder drawers; patent; Brass lined Curtain; Polished Oak; Writing Table; 6 Turn bier lock; one lock securing all drawers; 8 heavy cardboard Filing Boxes; Cupboard in end;' Paneled Finished Back; Extension Arm Slides; Weight SOO lbs. Price, P. O. B. at Factory, S2A Set. -' Also 1,000 Antique Ash Desks. TSo. 4008. Same as above, except made of Solid Antiqne Ash, good as oak. Welch gOO lbs. Price F O. B. a Factory, SSI Ketv Shipped from onr Indianapolis factory direct. Made and sold solely by the TYLER DESK CO., St. Louis, Mo. WO pmga Catalogue of Bank Counters, Dexka, etc , in colors ' ot ever printed. Booka free; postage la centa. 6m we fr sn MADE BY THE are ''Treated with Carbonate of Soda, Magnesia, Potash or Bicarbonate of Soda." To partially supply the loss of natural flavor and color caused by this treatment, fragrant gums and dyes are used. -" Dr. Sidney Ringer. Professor of Medicine at University College, London, and Physician to the College Hospital, perhaps the greatest , English authority on the action of drugs, states in his " H and- book of Therapeutics" that "the sustained admin istration of alkalies and their carbonates renders the blood it is said, poorer in solids and in red corpuscles, and impairs the nutrition of the body." Of ammonia, carbonate of ammonia, and spirits of ammonia, he says: " These.preparations nave many properties in common with the alkaline, potash, and soda group. They .possess a strong alkaline reaction, are freely soluble in water, have a high diffusion-power, and dissolve the animal textures. . . . . If admin istered too long, they excite catarrh of the stomach and intestines." . , : , For more than 100 Years the house of Walter iSalcer & Co. have made their Cocoa Prepa rations ABSOLUTELY PURE, using NO Patent Process, Alkalies or Dyes. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass. janl D&W9m we fr sn BABY ONE SOLID SOKE. Tried Everything wlIiont Belief. Best Night or Day.' Cured by Cnilcnra Remedies. No My baby, when two months old. bad a breaking out with what the doctor called eczema. Her head, arms, feet, and hands were each one solid sore. I tried everything, but neither the doctors nor anything - else did her any good. We could get no rest day or night with her. In my extremity I tried the Cuticura Reme dies, but I confess I had no faith in them, for I had never seen them tried. To my g eat surprise, in one week's i time after, beginning to use the Cuticura Remedies, the sores were well, but I con tinned to use the Resolvent for a little while, and now she is as fat a baby as you would like to see, and as sound as a dollar. I believe -my baby would have died jf I had not tried Cuticura Remedies. I write this that every mother with a baby like mine can feel confident that there is a medicine that will cure the worst eczema, and that medicine is the Cuticura Mrs. BETTIE BIRKNER, I.ockhart, Texas. Cuticura Bemedies Care every humor of the skin and scalp nf infancy and childhood, whether torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, sealy. crusted, pimpl. , or blotchy, with loss of hair, and every impurity of the blood, whether: simply scrofulous, o hereditary, when, the best physic ans and all other remedi s fail. Patents, save your children years of mental and phvg-cal suffering. Begin now. Cure- made in childhood are permanent. Cuticura Remedies re the gieatest skin cures, blood purifiers, and humor remedies of modern times, are absolutely pure, and may be ossd on the youngest infant wita the most gratitying success. Sold everywhere. Price, Cuticura, 50c.; Soai 85c.; Rksolvknt. $1. Preparerby thePoTTM Drug and Chemical Corporation, Boston. - t& Send for "How to Cure Skin Diseases." 62 pares, 50 illustrations and 100 testimonials.. PIH PLES, black heads, chapped' and " oily skin t-uiw ujr U11UI((A mEOlCATED OOAP. s fi- FREE FROM DH1MMISM tjl ''JK Jn one minute tn. Catlenra ADtl-fain Plast er relieves rheu m tir tint;. . 1 t 1 1 muscular pains and weaknesses. The first and only iibuuiuukuui pain-Kiiiing piasters. aov t D&W tf ; ; ; r . . fX'ful nr. lDnDTonitc i .inUM r 1 1 If II r MASS. dec 6 4m ipa82j. 3Lt II m3 arm -
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 16, 1892, edition 1
2
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