Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Jan. 13, 1894, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT HE t'fMO SrR. tae oldcjt dauiy news aper in North Carolina, is pab'isned daily except Joiriay, at $8 00 per rear, 3 U0 or six months, $1 50 I ' three months, 50 cents for oae-moutH. -j mail suk noen. Delivered to city sabscnucrs ai tue rate of cents per week for any period from ooe week to oi - ADVERTISING RATES iDA1LV. Oik sqoaf a w day, $1 00 ; two days, f 1 75 ; thrr-s days, 50 ; I -ur days, 3 00 ; five days, $3 50 ; one week, 4 00 ; t o weeks, 6 50 ; three weeks, $8 50 ; one month, tlO 03 ; two months, $17 00; three months, -1 00 ; n aonths, $40 00 ; twelve months, $30 00. Ten lines cf s ltd Nonpareil type make one square. THE WEEKLY STAR is published etrery Friday '.orraag at $1 00 per year. 60 cents for six months, 20 c :cts for three months. All announcements of Fairs, Festivals, Balls, Hops, Picnics, Society Meetings, Political Meetings, &c., wiii be charged regular advertising rates. Notices under head of "City Items" 20 cents per Use or first insertion, and 15 cents per line for each snbse q lent insertion. Advertisements discontinued before the a me con- t acted In has expired charged transient rates for time ictuaily published. No advertisements inserted m Loca: Coinmss at any ! (ice. A aanonnccmeats and recommendations of candi- d t)es for office, whether in the shape of conimunica- u jos or otnerwise. win tie charged as advertisements. Payments for transient advertisements must be made la advance. Known parties, or strangers with proper re erecce, may pay monthly cr quarterly, according to on tract. Remittances must be made by Check, Draft, Postal ttcney Order, express or in Kegistered Letter, only in a remittances will be at the nzx ot the publisher. Advertisements inserted once a week in Daily will be c larged $1 00 per square for each insertion. Every o her day, three-fourths of daily rate. Twice a week. t vo-tairas of dailv rate. Communications, anlers they contain important news u discuss briefly and properly subjects of real interest, are nut wanted ; and, if acceptable in every other way, t ley will invariably be rejected if the real name of the aatbor s withheld. .Notices of Marriage or Death, Tributes of Respect Vesomtions of Thanks, &c, are charged for as ordi u .ry advertisements, but only half rates when paid for t:rictly in advance. At this rate 50 cents will pay for a simple announcement of Maniaxe or Death. An extra charge will be made for double-column or triDie-column advertisements. Contract advertisers will not be allowed to exceed ta ir space or advertise anything foreign to their regu lar ousiness witnout extra cuarge at trauaicui rates. Advertisements kept under toe head ot "Mew Adver-tise-aents' will be charged fifty per cent, extra. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occup y any special place, will be charged extra according tr tn : position dearea. Advertisers should always specify the issue or issues thev desire to advertise in. wnere no issue is named the advertisement will be inserted in the Daily. Where an advertiser contracts tor tae paper to be sent to him A rsf-J n a Ha rim hie r4vrt'iamafit tst it fHa nmnrirn I will only be resoonsiDle tor toe mailing ot tne paper to I h s address. Amusement, Auction and Official ad vertisr mentis on: dollar per square tor eacb insertion. B7 WILLIAfl fl. BEUNAUl. WILMINGTON, f. -. Saturday Morning. Jan. 13, ii4. PL A YIN Q IT FOE POLlaCS. There is not a civilized country on the face of the earth which is cot now suffering more or less from in dustnal depression, some of them very much Workmen are rioting in the streets of Berlin for bread, driven to desperation oy tne pangs of hunger and by the pitiful cries of their loved ones for food. Unem ployed workmen In London have been threatening to inaugurate a reign of dynamite and anarchy in that city. The hard-pressed working people of Sicily have risen in riot against the collection of a small tax. Oa this side of the ocean the United States are about the only country that can properly be called an industrial country, and we know the ordeal to which we hav been subjected, but there are very few who know how severe and far-reaching it has been. There is not an in dustry, both of the protected and unprotected kind, which has not felt it. Tne farm, the shop, the factory, the store, the counting house, the railroad, the steamboat and the steamship have all felt it, and feel it yet, although there are symptoms of a lifting of the pressure. In the face of this almost univer sal depression Republican politicians who hold representative positions and occupy seats that were intended for statesmen have the unblushing effrontery to assert that the depres sion was not caused by anything that has happened, but by something which it is feared may happen; not by any legislation that we have had, but by the fear of legislation that we may have. They ignore all the financial legislation (which has had very much to do with it) and agita tion of the past, all the tariff legisla tion of the past, all the reckless extravagance of the past, and put the responsibility upon the alleged dread that something is going to be done to deprive, favored manufac turers of some . of the spoils they reaped under the McKmley system of distributing spoils. The men dacity of these assertions is only equalled by the brazen assurance of the men who make them, and the contemptible opinion they must have of the intelligence of the peo ple whom they think they can hum bug with this kind of chatter. There never has been a national . election in this country since the high protective era began when the tariff was not an issue, and when tariff reform was not demanded, and there has never been a Congress as sembled that the tariff was not more or less discussed. It has always been a bone of contention and there never has been an election in which the same old scare was not used to arouse the workmen in the protected industries against threatened changes in the tariff by which the protected manufacturers and others would be deprived of some of the protection which they intimating If not directly charging I fected you have a Pinched Look. Se had. But we never heard of anv that it is a Southern tariff. insmrrl cure good health anjj you will have good panic, or or any industrial Dreak up although these were periodically pre- dieted anrl wor a narr nf th R. publican campaigner's stock in trade. When confronted with this now, j they say the collapse didn't come then, for there was a Republican Senate between the tariff destroyers and the people, even when the' Dem- place in Congress in jthe past twen ocrats had the President and the ty-five years, and it Jshows that the House of Representatives, but they torget that when they take refuge behind a plea of this kind, that they convict themselves of wilful and knowing deception when they raised such a howl -to scare the workmen when there was no occasion for their being scared and not the remotest possib'lity of the tariff being inter fered with while the bulwark of a' Republican protective Senate was there to prevent it. They confess the hypocrisy ot their pleading and the fraud they were playing on the peo ple. But if all they now say be true, if this great industrial paralysis be the result of fear that the protection which manufacturers have had will be reduced, it is one of the best ar guments that could be advanced for a reduction and one of the best of reasons why the protective policy should be abandoned altogether. There can be no permanent stability in any industrial system which may be thrown into confusion at every election, and be prostrated on the advent of a new party to power as they say our industrial system has been by the accession to power of the Democratic Dartv. If the thnus- anus OI WOrsmen WHO are employed in the protected industries and the many millions of dollars invested in them aro to be dependent upon the perpetuation of a policy advocated by one political party and opposed by another, they are both in a pitia ble condition and it would be better for both that such a policy had never been thought of and that it be wiped out of existence at the earliest possible day. If that is the price the employer who puts his money in manufacturing industries, and the workman whose brains and muscle are employed to operate them pay for this so-called protection it is is very dearly purchased. They would do infinitely better to go back to the so-called free trade tariff of 1846 when every industry hoed its own row, took care of itself, stood on its own merits, looked to no Govern ment coddling, and instead of asking for it went along, attended to its own business without any Govern mental paternalism or interference, and prospered as they never pros pered before or since. When the Republican politicians of to-day at tribute the business derangement and industrial depression to tariff reform agitation they prove too much and are making our a very strong case against the system they essay to champion and defend. 3IIN0R 1NTI0. According to the last reports from Jacksonville Governor Mitchell was stm in the ring with his pack up, (which means to say there is no back down in him) and war paint on. We remarked when Mr. Bjwlen of the Duval Athletic Club, threw down the gauntlet with such a grand flourish that he was making the situation worss for himself, and was forcing the Governor to go to the extreme of his powers or to throw up the sponge and not only acknowledge himself vanquished but virtually ac knowledge that he had no authority in law for the action he had taken. Whether Governor Mitchell has any doubts as to his powers under the law, in the construction of which there seems to be a difference of opinion between him and the arrangers of this fight, he is encouraged in the stand he has taken against it by the popular sentiment of his State, as ex pressed by resolutions of coenmen- dation passed by two State assem blages representing two of the strongest religious denominations i.i the State, while there has not been a single protest against it from any source outside of the Duval Club which went into it on speculation and put its money up on it. If they had done the wise thing they would have had the legal question decided before they put up their money and brought the bruisers to Florida. In the meantime Governor Mitchell is in the ring to stay, and the club doesn't seem to be "in it. So far in the tariff debate in the House of Representatives the Dem ocrats have the decided advantage in the discussion, but they are better fortified because they have the facts and the argument with them. That their opponents realize this is shown by the way the Republicans scatter, and the efforts that Some Of them , ... . , make to give it a sectional turn by . . . . . . Dy boutaern men wno wisn to break down the industrial system of the Mnrth nf Wa hrrwnritv tW hav J become jealous, and which they are laboring 6 destroy. This is the same old stereotype line; of "argument' that has been resorted to in every tariff discussion that has taken advocates of protection dare not dis- cuss the question on its merits. It may be noted that among the Dem ocrats who have spoken upon the subject up to the present the most radical reformers are from the North, and the most conservative from the South, which gives the lie to the in timation that it is a tariff gotten up in the interest of the South, even if we had not the further evidence that some of the most outspoken opposi tion to the bill comes from some of the Southern Democratic Represen tatives who object tp it on account of its tree raw material provisions. CURRENT CPMMENT. Dollar wheat is the farmer's ideal, but he fell far behind it in 1893, getting on an average only 52 cents a bushel. He is not likely to have as hard times in 1894. Phil. Ledger, Ind. The Chicago Tribune, bely ing its Republican record, wants a tax laid on tea and coffee. This would bear more I lightly on rich bachelors who inherit thcr millions than on some poor devil of a toiler with a wife, seven children ana a dollar a day. This country will never go back t$ that system. N. Y. Commercial Advertiser, Rep. With the refusal of the Pro visional Government of Hawaii to comply with the poSite hint of Minis ter Willis to step down and out the interest' of this Administration in Hawaiian affairs his definitely come to an end. h.x tueen L,iliuokalani and President Dole will have to fight it out without any! furthtr interfer ence on the part ofHhis Government. A policy of non-intervention, which should have been adopted in the be ginning, must no-vfbe adopted out of necessity. P.hil Record, Dem A London hatte says his observa tions establish the tact that men s heads continue td grow until they reach the age of sixty years. They may do so in this country but some of them never grotv big enough to fill their grandfather's hat. Whether the heads grow larger or not there is no doubting the fajct that the skulls of a good many gtiw thicker. There are lots of men in this country who still adhere to th protective tariff delusion. Senator Quay is reported as say ing, when asked aout the probabili ties of the passage of the Wilson bill, "I know if we; had the majority in Congress that' the Democrats have we would pass any measure that was endorsed by our party. The difference between the Demo crats and Republicans in power is that the Republicans stick together and the Democrats don't. Some of the meanest thieves in North Carolina areiin Forsyth county. A few nights agq they robbed the meet house of thej county home for the poor. When ij comes to robbing a poor house totaldepravity must be in it. ; The Philaddpnfa Times almanac for 1894 contains; much statistical and other information conveniently arranged for reference. Appointmen a tor W limine too District. Scott's Hill circuit, at Rocky Point, January 13. h and 14tb. Wilmington, Market Street, at night, January 14th. Soutbport station, lanuary 21st and 22 d. Columbus circuit, at Fair Bluff, Janu ary 27ih and 28ch. Carver's Creek circuit, at Wayman, February 3 d and 4th. Elizabeth circuit, ; at Elizabethtown, Fcoruarv I0-.h and lgth B'aden circuit, at Biihel, February 17th and 18th. Wdccamav? circuit at Bethesda, Feb ruary 24tb and 25thl w nueviiie siaiion,!-at nient, reDruary Clinton circuit, at Clinton. March 3rd and 4th. i Onslow circuit, at Jacksonville, March 10 h and 11th. ! Magnolia circuit, at Centenary. March 17th and 18 h. f Kenansville circuit, at Kenansville, March 24th and 25th. W. S. Rone Presiding Elder. It is strictly an fAmerican remedy; home-made and without foreign flavor. we refer to Salvation Oil. The greatest cure on earth for pain. t m If the Baby is Cnttlns Teeth, Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teeth ing, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain; cures- wind colic, anq is the best remedy for diarrhoea, bold by druggists m every part cf the world. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. .v inslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other .kind. Twenty-five cents a bott.e. E r --- Good ooki. Good looks are more than skin deep, depending upon a healthy condition of all the vital organs, f If the Liver be in- I i r:i : T i. : l I -iivc, you uavca oiiiuus injK., 11 yuui stomacn De aisoraerea you nave a uys- xtitic and it Kidnevs be af- looks. Electric Bitters is the great al terative and Tonic, aets directly on these vital organs. Cures pimples. Blotches, Boils and gives a gOCd complexion. Sold at R. R. Bellamy's Drug Store, 50c. per bottle. 1 1 . TWINKLINGS. Charlie Papa, why do some of the old men in the corner groan wben the preacher talks loud ? Papa The sermon cu sthem, darling. Cleveland Plain Dealer, Papa (to son who had been out to tea) Ht did you enjoy yourself last evening, Harry? Harry Fine, papa; and we had some honey with real chewing gum in it for tea. Harper's Younc People, The Festivity Not Yet Com plete. Tommr Come on out an' play. E1dy I can t. Tommy Why not? Eddy I got some Christmas things wot I ain't broke yet. Chicago Record. Wife George, I wish you be longed to my church. The new minis ter is a man you would like. Husband Not such a bigoted Meth odist as the other, then, is be? Wife No; he's very liberal. He be lieves that Episcopalians, if they repent, can be saved. Puck A great cure for cougd. Mrs. A. K. Morris. 456 Canton St., Philadelphia. Pa., writes : "I took several bottles of Dr. Ball's Cough Syrup for a bad cough and was entirely cured " t BncKlen Arnica Salve. Tne be3t 5a.!e in tec worirt oi cuu Jruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum Fever. Sores, Tetters, Chapped Hands Chilblains. Corns, and all Skin Eruptions and positively cures Piles or no pay is required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money retunaec. frice ih cents per box ror ie bv :o"v:rt Bellamy. Wholesale and Retail Drug- MARINE. Port Almanac January 13. Sun Rises 7 09 A M Sun Sets 509 P M Day's Length 10 h 00 m High Water at South port. . 12 25 A M High Water at W-im.in.non 2.12 A M ARRIVED. Steamship Croatan, Hansen, George town, H G bmallbones. Br schr Mabel Darling, 111 tons. Ranger. Nassau. N P. Cronly & Morris. CLEARED. Br schr Jennie F Willey, Bulger, Sa vannah, Ga. Geo Harris. Son & Co MARINE DIRECTORY. List of Vessels In the Port of Wil mington, N. C, January 12, 1894. STEAMERS. Harrowgate (Br), 1,250 tons, Husband, Heide &Co. Leander (Br). 1,888 tons. Robson, Alex Sprunt & Son; BARQUES. Demetra (Ger). 429 ton9, Schramm, . Ernst (Ger), 659 tons, Ahrens, Paterson, Downing & Co. Anna Schwaloe (Ger), 797 tons, Niejahr, Heide & Co. Conquistatore (Ital), 599 tons, Meresca, Heide & Co. Wodan (Ger), 479 tons. Arndt, E Pe schau & Co. SCHOONERS. Orlando. 180 tons, Matsen, Geo Harriss, Son & Co. Jennie Hall. 392 tons. Leighton, Geo Harriss, bon e Co. Bonilorm (B). 148 tons, Gould, Geo Har riss. Son & Co. Thos N Stone. tons, Rutlege, Geo Harriss, Son & Co. Keewavdin (Br). tons, McLean, ueo Harriss. Son & Co. Thos Clyde. 320 tons. Outten, Geo Har riss, Son & Co. C C Lister, Robinson, Geo Harriss, Son & Co. Eva A Danenhower 213 tons, Gardner, Geo Harriss, Son & Co. David Baird 613 tons, Booye. Geo Har riss. Son & Co. lona (Br). 195 tons, Moescher. Geo Har riss. Son & Co. Uranus, 344 tons, Norwood. Geo Harriss, Son & Co. Elwood Burton, 375 tons, Hitchens, Geo Harriss. Son & Oo CAUTION. If a dealer ofiers W. I Douglas shoes at a reduced price, or says he ha them without name stamped on bottom, p at him do wn as a fraud . W. L. Douglas S3 SHOE THE WORLD. W. L. DOUGLAS Shoes are stylish, easy fit ling:, and give better satisfaction at the prices ad vertised than any other make. Try one pair and be convinced. The stamping of V. L. Douglas' name and price on the bottom, which guarantees their value, saves thousands of dollars annually to those who wear them. Dealers who push the sale of V. L. Douglas Shoes gain customers, which helps to increase the sales on their full line of goods. They can afford to sell at a less profit, and we believe you can save money by buying oil your footwear of the dealer advertised below. Catalogue free upon application. Address, TV. L. DOLGLAS, Brockton, Mass. Sold by H. VonQLAHN, jan3 5aio eod to th sa Wilmington. A Weak Digestion strange as it may seem, is caused from a lack of that which is never exactly digested fat. The greatest fact in connection with in appears at this point it is partly digested fat and the most weakened digestion is quickly strengthened by it. The only possible help i7i ConsumplioTi is the arrest of waste and re newal cf near, healthy tissue. Scoffs Emulsion has done zanders in Con sumption just this zoay. Prepared by Sentt & Bownn, TJ. Y. All frH-ti tUcSlti M t 4 F Hi COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MARKET. STAR OFFICE. January 12. SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market steady at Vt cents per gallon. Sales at quotations. ROSIN. Market Grm at DO cents per bbl. for Strained and 95 cents for Good Strained bid. TAR. Quiet at 90 cents per bbl. of 280 tbs. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Distillers quote the market firm at $1 00 for Hard. $1 60 for Yellow Dip and Virgin. PEANUTS Farmers' stock quoted at 40 to 55 cents per bushel of 28 pounds. Market quiet. COTTON Firm with sales reported at 1 cents. Quotations at the Produce Exchange were: Ordinary 5U cts ) Eb Good Ordinary. Low Middling. . Middling Good Middling.. 6 7 3-16 1 15-16 Itf.tKl PIN. COll -!1 ... Spirits Turpen'me. Rosin Tar Cr:H? Turoentme . 952 113 1.015 180 127 oaies casks bbls bbis btts C0TT0N AND NAVAL STORES. WEEKLY STATEMENT. RECEIPTS. For weekended January 12, 1894 CttUn. Spirits. Rasix.. Tar. Crudi 5,756 9:0 10,973 8.7 363 RECK1HTS. For week ended January 13, 1893 Cotton. Spirits. Rosm. Tar. Crude 7,890 1.C71 8,874 1,181 110 EXPORTS. For week ended January 12 1S94. Tar. 1,5 8 iO 1,5.8 Cotton . 1,135 . m.0 11,208 Spirits. 561 550 Kosin. E64 3 686 Crude. Domestic . Foreign . . 92 Oil 91 1,111 4,170 EXPORTb. For week ended January 12, 1S93. Cotton. Spirits. Rosin. Tar. de. Domestic F oreign . 506 7.56 157 1,181 25,814 785 21,ty7 e9 .0 26.33J 1,511 21,751 1.253 S I OC Kb. Ashore and Afloat, January 12. 1894 Askvre. AJloat. Total. Cotton Spirits Rosin. Tar... Crude. 12,eX)7 39.3S2 5.136 392 10,4-3 4( 2,742 00 00 22,8 0 1,867 42.1 -'4 5,1:16 3 2 STOCKS. Ashore and A9oat, Januany 13, 1893. Cotton. Spirits. Rosin. Tar. Crude. 14,117 2,828 12 887 5.417 776 QUOTATIONS. January 12, 1893. January 13. 18! 3. Cotton.... . 9? Spirits..,. ira 14 Rosin VO (,y5 97,4 fl 024 90 1 15 .. $1 001 I f I SI OAu.1 70 JOMEb'l li itflA.rXK.ri 1; 1 ar... Ciude. Sy Telegraph to th Morning sr. Financial. ' New York, January 12 Evening Money on can nas oeen easy, ranging from 1 to 1J4 per cent., last loan at 1 and closing ottered at 1 per cent. Prime mercantile paper 44J per cent. Sterling exchange easier; actual busi ness in bankers' bills at 48t484 for sixty days and 4B8i44!;b.J4 tor demand commercial Di us 4S,JJ44.SI ior sixty days; 485W485 for demand. Govern- rr"':t bonds firm; United States coupon fours 113; United States twos 95. bcite bond3 dull; North Carolina lours 96; North Carolina sixes 119. Railroad bonds weaker. Dilver at the Stock Exchange to-day was neglected. Commercial. Nr.v.' v URK .January 12 Evening Cotton spot steady; middling gulf 8 9-16c; middling uplands 8 5-lftc; sales bales. Cotton lutures closed firm, with sales of 220 800 bales: January 8 17c; February 8 20c; March 8 29c; April 8.37c; May 8 45-.; June 8 52c; July 8 58:; Au gust 8 63c. Flour market dull and we-k; win ter wneat low graces uu3 45; patents 83 403 65; Minnesota clear $2 502 90; patems 3 804 50; low extra?- $3 05 4o; southern flour dua and weak; common to fair extra $2 003 00; good io enmee ao iug4 zu. wneat spot moderately active and turner; No. 2 red in store and at elevator 66S6.?4c: atloat bob8j4C: options verv auil and 7 JaC hiyher, closing firm; No. 2 red cioseo. January 66Mc; February 67c; May 71c. Corn spot duil but steady;No. 2 at elevator 41c; afloat 42c; options dull. cl. sing steady and unchanged; Ian uary 41Jc; February 42c; May 44c Uais spot dull and weak; No. 2 Un uary 33)c; February 3 c; May 34C; spot io a. Sdftc. JNo. 2 white 35c: mixed Western 345c; white do. 3540c. Hay steady Beel dull but steady;familv 811 00 13 00. extra mess 8 008 50. beet hams quiet and firm at $16 001G 50. tierced Deef inactive; city; extra India mess $19 0020 00. Cut meats firmer and more demand; pickled bellies 7Mc; pickled shoulders 6mc; pickled hams 99MC: middles nominal. Lard near ov nrm; lutures easier; western steam Closed at $ tjrt; citv $s ous 75; options nomina1; rehned Continent ; South America $9 50; compound 86 506 62U Pork quiet, mess $14 5015 00. Butter quiet: fancy steady. Cotton seed oil qnietand firmer; crude 31c bid; yellow 36c. Petroleum quiet. Molasses nominal; New Orleans.open kettle, good to choice, dull but steady 8038c. Peanuts quiet; tancy hand-picked 34c. Coffee- options dull and unchanged to 15 points down; January $17 1017 10; February $1 6516 70; March $16 3516 45; May $16 00; spot Kio steady and quiet; No. 7, 18c. Sugar raw firmer and quiet; fair reniiing '4 y-lbc; rehned steady and in light demand; No. 7. 33 13-16c; standard A 4 l-164c; cut-loaf 4 13 16 5c; crushed 4 13-16&5c; granulated 41-164c Freights to Liverpool quiet and firm; cotton, by steamer, 5-32d; grain, Dy steamer, od. v HICAGO, January 12.-.-Casn niu; tions. Flour market steady. w;ih quo- tions unchanged. Wheat No. 2 sprint 61c. No. 2 red 61c. Corn No. 2, 84c. Oats No. 2. 2728c. Mess pork, per bbl.. $13 20l3 25. Lard per 100 lbs.. $8 27$8 80. Short nb sides, loose per 100 lbs $6 67U 6 72. Ury salted shoulders, boxed per 100 lbs. $6 256 50. Short clear sides, boxed per 100 lhs., $7 007 60. Whiskey fl 15. The leading futures ranged as follows. opening, and closing; Wheat No, lanuary 61. 61c; Mav 66. 66c; July 67i. 67fa Corn No. 2 January 84&c; May 38H. 38fcc; July 88, ooc. uats wo. a January 27$, 27c; May 80$.80irfc: July 28.283c Mess pork, per bbl January $18 32(, 13 20; May $13 40. 13 32). Lard, per 100 lbs January $8 20. 8 22; May S7 87, 7 85. Short ribs, per 100 lbs January $6 67. : May $7 78. 6 80. HALT! murk, Ian. 13. Hour steady and unchanged. Wheat dull and easy; No. 2 red spot and January 64J46Jic; february 65?66c; May 69U59Mc; steamey. No 2 red 6ljrf61fc; milling wneat ov sample. 66c. Lorn dull; mixed spot 414iic; January 4141c; May 43M4iJHc; steamer mixed SDWc bid; southern corn, by sample 8842c; yellow corn, by sample, on grade 88 41c. Oats steady and demand slow; No. 2 white western 3585c; No. 2 mixed 8333c. COT7UIN WlAHKEl- Bv Telegraph to th' MorniDK St January 12. Galveston, firm at 1c net receipts 2,547 bales; Norfolk. firm at at 7Mc net receipts 1.393 bales; 5a- vannah, steady at lc net receipts 1,981 nales; New Orleans, firm at 7c net receipts 0,318 bales. Charleston, Urm at net receipts 2.122 bales. FOREIGN MARKETS. By Cable to the Uoinut - Liverpool, January 12. Noon Cotton in demand and prices firm. American middling 4d; sales 12,000 bales, of which 10.900 were American; speculation and export 1.000 bales. Re ceipts 20,000 bales, of which 15.800 were American. Futures steady and demand moderate: January and February delivery 4 22 64, 4 21 644 22-f54d; freoruary and March delivery 4 24 64. 4 23 644 24-64d; March and April delivery 4 26 64. 4 25- 644 26 64n; April and Mav delivery 4 27-644 28 64d; May and June delivery 4 29 64. 4 23-644 30 64d; June and July delivery 4 30 d4g; July and August de livery 4 33 64d; August nd September delivery 4 34-Gld. Tenders of cotton for delivery to- da 1,800 bales new and 600 bales old dockets. 4 P. M American middling fair at 4J-gd; u.0 -d middling 4 9 lCd; middling 4 7 16 1; l,w m:ddi:nij 4 5 16d: eood ordi nary 4 3 16d; ordinary 4d. January 4 22 6id, Jinuary and February 4 22-61-'. buyer; February and March 4 2i-64ri, seller: March and Apnl 4 25 44 25 64d; April and Mav 4 27-644 28 64d; Mav and June 4 29-64d. buer; June and Julv 4 31-64ri, buye.r; July and Ausust 4 32-64a4 33 64d; Aceust and Septem ber 4 34 64d, value. Futures closed firm. An operation or injections of carbolic acid are extremely dangerous Try p.ine-e Pile Cure. Positively guaran teed by J. H. H-rdin. All Free. Those who have used Dr. King's New Discovery know i;s value, and those who have not, have now the opportunity to try it Free. Call on the advertised Drug gist and cet a Trial Bottle, Free. Send your name and address to H. E. Buck- len & Co., Chicago, and getasample box of Dr. King's New Life Pills Free, as well as a copy of Guide to Health and Household Instructor, Free. All of which is guaranteed to do you good and cost vou notnme at R. R. Bellamy's Drug Store. nrmninniiiimiimiim;inMnmnmimnim; The Naked Eye S Can't detect the microbes of disease, 5 and yet they exist by the million. They permeate the system, pollute the blood and poison the vital organs. S I Disease is the inevitable result. 1 R ADAM'S I MICROBE KILLER I 5 destroys every specie of microbe and s cures every rorm ot disease, it s tne 5 latest and greatest discovery of sci- ence. No matter what form of dis- s ease you are suffering with it will pay you to investigate, a 50-page E S book of valuable information free. 1 The Wm. Radam Microbe Killer Co., I 7 Lalglit St., Mew York City. 5 AGENT FOR WILMINGTON. S It. it BELLtm. 5irau!uinai!itinniuiannnnuii!iiiiiuuiiit auuiiirtni rm nov 30 tf th tu 2 b, i iLY! 1 BnlTiVC ForLCSTorFArXIirG KA2TH00D: A r UJS 1 i is t, Oeneral and NEB.V0TJS DEBIXTTY: fTTTP "v5 Vealrxes of Eody ar.d Hiad: Effecti J vJ JLliji of ErrcraorEioesaesinOldor Young. Rotrast, Sobl Hi'MOonral'T Restr-rrd. How t Emlanrr mn4 Strenvtbcn Wbfc.i :.iTKL0f ED OKtUJS PARTS of BOOT. Abiolu' oaRiliir. :r.Sl TRE1TMKS7 BesrDU la a Hen te&tt.y tmjx 4 ; ts, Trrritorie. and FareifB CooorH. Ten en Trite tliria. Sort:, foil vxjMmaation, ad preofta Bal)d eisA) fcoe. Addnsas E1E BUlSAi. CO., BUFFALO, 1. 1 tebll lv D&w 3d nrra tn th sa Ir KKHFi Xbcue iiKted directJr ta tha teat of PaBj Si. W a 0 tlioa deascs cf the CVenito-Unnarx Or. "'r' r:rcs tio chanra of diet or 'sous, i.-frciirial or puisODOua Tced j to bo t-iiu k:tcmaUf. Vbea AS A PH EVE MTIVE ty clihtr sac it H impossible to contract any yenerea! disease ; but in the case of - . ti:osc alr-jcay L roT'j .tklt Arrucraa with Gonorritta and Gleet, we guaru 53 tec a euro. Price by mail, pastase paiw. i 1 per box, cr 6 boxes lor $a ROB'T R. BELLAMY A CO., Diuggis s mn- Sole Agents, cnange dailv Wilmmgt n, N. C. dec 5 tf DO YOU KNOW OR. FELIX LE BRUN'S STEEL ID PEHHYROYHL PILLS are the original and only FRENCH, safe and re liable cure on the market. Price $L00; sent by mail. Genuine sold only by ROB'T R BELLAMY A CO.. Druggists and Sole Agents. M.. ir-1: , decStf change dailv. " umingtoD N. C. These tiny Capsules are superior to Balsam of Copaiba, rv Cubeba and Injections. (flfljy) They cure in48 hours the V J same diseases without anyincoa- TCnience. SOLO BY ALL DRUGGISTS june 18 tf D. O'Connor, REAL ESTATE AGENT, WIL- mington, N. C. Stores, Offieea and Dwelling for rent. Houses and Lou for sale oo easv ter r.s. Rent, taxes and insurance attended to promptly. Cash oaaad oa improved citv pr.v-rr anftf Johnson's Clearance Sale -OF- SEASONABLE Millinery EYERYTHIHC GOING AT COST! Your Chance ior Bargains. . We are determined to carry no s:oc over, and now offer all Ladies' and Misses' ard Children's Ha s, Baby Caps, Infants' Cloaks, &c, &c, a: PRIME COST. Our I erms are Strictly Cash, Call early, and secure a splenc:d Bargain nw WM. A. JOHNSON, Millinery & Fancy Goods No, 111 Market st, It Has Become the Town TALK ABOUT Wilmington's Big Racket Store Having such a stcdy rjn c-f c Hirers c-:: . holida. rush. IV.'e could n t r.tar wait up:n to crs, as we w juld rave de- red to co. V. r njore to do than we c-u'd do, anj our Sal- s mo-t doub'e l ose c f st p-ev-i us -a' !: we rave some very niLc . n e t- i fi. a . prett at d c ep things tor h h::ic oats We wou'd ii'nt to se I our To nd litv -for cxt We hive rot the rc o o to ca-r thf AH Toys rer uced tbout i'5 pe: ctnt 10 c! toe MitxUy c--xl come t iv a we -helping h r.d. as we aurec,ate the rr.a v 17. sboraisb. tQc.ecTou purl c We h : -r". Magrns. lJrartjf , h iirs of an tncs, C ic.ri br'c-a-rac and Fa cr A lie r . 1 r. hooks an many other things, rurfa-. r c : Cradle, Ye ociCes, Guns, T.n i v . l -1'ol's by the huncrcd, ad aim t e-.c 1 call for Dot't forget our 5 hoes. 4" ! pa r Cr: :r- r. -from 2 to 6, 5 to 8. 8 .0 11. 1 he br: ; rf -.. the -.tate f. r 25c I he be-! W.,r a gola, jolid irner ar.G c:a - ': - bhoes 'torn 2 tn 8. f. r w r . : i . - heap a .50. y emen !er . Sto s. These gords hav a! s e-n " : : put c sh and i 1 be vo'ri . -.ra- s r s r -. hur d ed aud fif d - : ; a -- - l Children'", bavin? jus- a-r-.vei. c h- St 4 kings and c f r .-n a i'k Habv Cap iu ' r c : for 25c 38;. 45c'. '-v 1 r-: - v--.-fian the m' f cu t i . : and io!d way d.-wr.. Cc me 10 r.e rc t . : " i-gha , o e a-.! r ' - -i - Frott street, o -:-e ' r .V . t : i BRADPY .v ! i -.VI "Ki dec 31 f To Our Friends And Patrons'! Accent cur i-'PCrrc i' r; very liberal paircu-e cur: -year, and if a firt-cl..- t - 1 ' : niturc, &c , vsil! :::J-ve 'A- '' to merit your ' 1 r 1 -;!0:'" age the conv.:".c ye Rest assured oj: goods w,".! t c u. best for the !owe: irsi.n;-.- '' Wishing you. one end a!:. a p"" perous and happy Nc" 'i''-;r- e are, ycur t -ti. e. SNEED & CO., No. 1C South From Street. The Cheapest Furniture House . a l .iL r I ! , o in iNorin L-niuiina. dee 31 52nd Year. The Great Farmw Industrial ano Stock Journal of the South. ONE YEAK FOB SI. To ever, subscriber who sends us $1 n d Southern Cultivator for ooe year and 20 lull pa- choice Garden Seed ,a,ied fite Sample copies and premium list wfll be roailea oa application to THB CTTLTIYATOB PUBLI8HIHG CO., porSltf Box415.AtlaaU,Gi. Big
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 13, 1894, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75