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By WILLIAM H. BERNARD.
WILMINGTON, N. C.
Sat urday Morning, Nov. 16. 1895
THE TWO CANALS.
A report comes from Washington
that President Cleveland will in his
forthcoming message recommend the
construction of the Nicaragua canal
and the extension of aid by this
Government, but will qualify the re
commendation by suggesting that
we invite the co operation ot Great
Britain. It is very likely that he
will recommend the extension of
Gevernment assistance to this great
enterprise, under proper safeguards,
as he is understood to be friendly to
it, but it is hardly likely that he will
suggest the co-operation of Great
Britain or of any other European
power.
Our opinion is that having failed
by her scheming to kill this enter
prise her co-operation can be very
easily secured if solicited by this
Government, for she would thus se
cure a proprietary interest in the
canal, the very thing her representa
tive men have been playing for
ever since they came to the conclu
sion they could neither kill it
nor prevent its construction under
American auspices. The idea of co
operation was suggested some time
ago by a leading London paper, the
Times, we think it was, and English
capitalists would much prefer to put
their money in this canal than in the
Panama ditch, in which $200,000,000
have been sunk, and where less than
half the work has been done, and
that the easiest part of it.
They may cut a canal across the
isthmus from Panama to Colon, for
digging dirt and blasting rock is
only a question of labor and money,
but constructing a canal that will be
practically successful, which will an
swer the purpose for which It is in
tended and can be kept in condition
without spending more money on it
than it can ever earn, that is another
matter. As we understand it, part
of the plan is to utilize the
Chagres river, one of the , wild
est and most ungovernable
streams on either continent, a
very well behaved stream at low
water but a terror in the rainy sea
sonsand when it rains in that neck
of land it does rain. Then the Cha
gres tumbles down and carries every
thing but the rocks with it. It looks
more like a torrent of liquid clay than
water, and that's about what it Is.
It is proposed to dredge this channel
and carry ships by lifts at the locks,
which will have to be as strong as
the rock ribs that keep the river in
to prevent the rushing waters from
carrying them away.
If the canal were practicable there
is no respectable harbor on either
side, for there is no harbor for deep
draft vessels at Colon, and on the
other side Panama is practically on
the open sea, with no harbor protect
tion for ships. The sea is so shallow
there that vessels of ordinary draft
must anchor a long distance from
the town, and none would think of
remaining longer at anchor than ab
solutely necessary. The only reason
wc sec ior selecting tnat as a
route for a canal was because the
isthmus is narrow there and they
thought they might utilize the Cha
gres river.
Numerous reports have been made
on the Nicaragua route aad its feasi
bility has never been called into
question. Several surveys have been
made, and while some have favored
some variations in the line as now
mapped, there is a general agreement
between them as to the essential fea
tures. There is also some difference
as to the estimates of the cost, the
figures varying from $60,900,000 to
$100,000,000, very few going over
theldtter figures. There is alto
getber about sixty miles of excava
ting to be done through a country
easy in comparison with the rocky
barriers on the Panama route, most o:
the route being through rivers and
lakes where some dredging only wil
be necessary and where much of the
way gives water deep enough to bear
the deepest draft ocean vessels. In
addition to this, while the Panama
Canal will be all salt water, most of
i
1 W
ask. r
,K ei
for tii
Kno
this canal will be fresh water, and it
is estimated that the advantage this
gives vessels in cleaning their bulls
of the sea water adhesions, insects,
&c, will more than balance the cost
of toll-in passing through the canal.
With a little dredging Greytown
can be made one of the best harbors
on that coast, and we believe there
is good harbor on the Pacific side,
certainly as good if not better than
Panama, and with all that it is sev
eral hundred miles nearer to both
our Atlantic and Pacific ports than
the Panama canal would be if com
pleted.
These are all considerations of
importance in comparing these two
routes and good reasons, why we
should not be lured into indifference
by any talk of completing the Pana
ma project, which, inE our opinion,
never will be completed, but will be
abandoned just as soon as it is an
established fact that this Govern
ment is to take hold of the Nicara
gua canal, or that American enter
prise and capital will build it, if the
Government fail to take an interest
in it. -
Feeling sure that it will be built
through American agencies and-that
tt can be so built, we don't want to
see any foreign power have a hand
in it, which v would mean a voice in
its control, but more especially Eng
land, which is our greatest commer
cial rival, "and to compete with
which is one of the minor reasons
why this canal is so unanimously
favored by the people of this coun
try. England worked in after the
Suez canal became a success and se
cured a controlling voice in that,
and she will do the same thing with
the Nicaragua canal If she gets half
a chance. It must be an American
canal, controlled by Americans.
MINOR MENTION.
We sympathize with the supersti
lion-ridden people of pagan coun
tries who bow before their idols, and
even with the people of some Chris
tian countries who are not as far ad
vanced as we think they should be in
religious enlightenment, but with all
our educational and other opportuni
ties to get above the level there is an
immense amount of superstition, or
blind faith in men who assume ex
traordinary personalities, and profess
to possess miraculous powers, which
is confined to no particular class of
people and to no particular section,
Some time ago a so-called Messiah
named Swinefurth made his appear
ance in Illinois; thousands of people
flocked to see and hear him, and
many believed that he was really
what he professed to be. He talked
of establishing a new Jerusalem in
Illinois or somewhere else, and
might possibly have carried out his
scheme if he hadn't gotten into legal
complications and wound up in jail
Shortly after that we had a colored
"Messiah" in Georgia, who was soon
followed by a colored "Virgin
Mary," who drew immense crowds of
colored people and set them crazy.
Their "mission" was ended by both
going to the insane asylum, although
they were no more crazy than
hundreds of the people who
bllowed and believed in them.
These are not isolated instances;
there -are others of the same kind,
the latest being the mysterious man
Schlatter, who came unheralded out
of New Mexico, and who for several
weeks has been drawing thousands
of people to Denver, Col., who came
to be healed by this man who came
from "the Father." He didn't pro
fess to heal by his own power, but
"blessed" handkerchiefs and left the
result with "the Father." He didn't
do it for money, for it does not ap
pear that he took up collections,
though doubtless some of the
cured" in their gratitude made
donations, though there is no men
tion of this, but the thousands who
went to him believed in him, and
pitied others who refused to believe.
The other night he left as mysteri
ously as he came, and left sorely
disappointed thousands who had
come to be healed. The Indian has
his "medicine man" who cures bv
incantations, and we pity the guile
less innocence of the untutored son
of the wild. But the Indians have
no "Messiahs."
According to the November report
of the U. S. Department of Agricul
ture, the grain crop this year is the
largest ever produced in this coun
try, with the exception of 1891. The
total is placed at 3,527,279.600
bushels, against 2,435,919,000 for
last year, divided as follows: wheat,
423,945,000 bushels; corn 2,158,400,-
000; oats 825,494,000; rye 27,081,-
000; barley 87,051,000; buckwheat
15,308,600, making an aggregate ex
tcss oi j.,vyi,3ou, euu bushels over
the crop of last year. The only crop
which shows a falling off is wheat,
which is 36,322,000 bushels less than
last year. All other crops show
large increase, especially corn, which
is nearly double the yield of last
year. The potato crop and apple
crop are also extraordinarily larze,
This means plenty to eat, but as far
as the farmer is concerned it means
low prices and that he will not real
ize any more if as much for what he
has to market as he did last year, al
though the prices were not high
men. as k must be marketed, how
ever, or go to waste, it means more
work for the railroads and for others
who handle the crops, so that aside
from cheaper food for the masses, a
great many will be benefitted by the
large crops, although the growers
will not nee mucn clear cash out
of them.
The Populist party Is in the "sere
and yellow i leaf." In the recent
elections it was demonstrated that it
will have no showing whatever next
year. In Mississippi the Pops., even
with Republican aid, aia nor. carry a
single county, while in Kentucky
i..v nnlv elected two ot tne loo
lJ J -
members of the Legislature. Their
weakness will be shown in North
Carolina in the elections of 1896.
Thousands of them will come back
to the Democratic party; other thou
sands will vote for the straightout
free silver candidate for President
who will be nominated if the Demo-
cratic national : convention aeciare
. . J -1 -
for a sinffle cold standard; while
v o
a majority of those who have been
Republicans will return to their old
love in the belief that the G. v. r.
will sween the country. There will
SJI WVf
be no fusion between the Republi
cans and Populists in North Caro
lina on the Presidential ticket; and
the fusion on the State and county
tickets will be so far from complete
that the Democrats will probably
have an even chance of carrying the
State, though much depends on the
action of the Democratic national
convention.
BOOK NOTICES.
Should Women Vote? is the title of a
unique little book issued by Paul Morse.
Publisher. New York, written by a
"Bachelor" who doesn't believe they
should, at least, until the r.ch outs give
up the habit of marrying titled nobodies
from other countries. He writes a story
to show why they shouldn't vote. The
book is neatly bound in cloth and well
printed. Address, Paul Morse, Pub
lisher. P. O. box 950, New York.
Considerable space is given in -the No
vember Sanitarian to the discussion of
"Alcoholism." its effects on health, lon
gevity, &c by medical men, which will
be found interesting. This is followed
by other papers, and editorials on sani
tary and other matters which the sani
tarian and others may peruse with profit.
Address A. N. Bell, M. D., Editor, 291
Union Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
We are in receipt of a very interesting
publication issued by Henry Glassford,
publisher. No. 66 Broad street, New
York, entitled International Trade. The
November number, in addition to statis
tics of exports to different countries
from various ports of this country, gives
much information as to Venezuela and
Cuba, which is particularly interesting in
view of the attention they are now at
tracting.
CURRENT COMMENT.
The deftness with which
Lord Salisbury avoided allusion to
the Venezuela question in his recent
speech is the ' subject of admiration
in diplomatic circles. New York
Journal, Dem.
. The fame of the Indiana col
ony in Georgia is spreading. The
city of Fitzgerald is acquiring a
world-wide notoriety almost before
it gets its roof on. People are talk
ing about it in all sections of the
country. It is a great advertisement
for the State, and a very good thing
for the colonists who have been able
to "get in on the ground floor."
Savannah News, Dem.
-The New York Sun's finan
cial editor says that "a gloom bangs
over Wall street" and, in the same
breath, affirms that the result of the
elections means the "killing of the
silver craze." President Cleveland
is advised to favor some high pro
tective duties and retire much paper
money. The issuance of another
batch of bonds is considered inevit
able. As Wall street is in the saddle
and controls this Government, why,
oh, why this "gloom?" Augusta
Chronicle, Dem.
TWINKLINGS.
Benny Bloobumper What
do they do in bucket shops, papa?"
Mr. iiloobumper " You should say
Whom do thev do in bucket shops ?'
They do the bucket shoppers. "Life.
"Your friend is an actor, isn't
he?"
"Yes."
"Very amusing fellow."
"Yess off the stage. Chicago Record.
jnunter "isoy, did you see a
rabbit run by here?"
Boy "Yep.
Hunter "How long ago?"
Boy "ItH be three years nex' Christ
mas. Judge.
"I'm sorry . now, mamma,"
sobbed Bobby, "that I stole those apples."
"un, yes, said tne motner, "your con
science nurts you, does it?
"No," returned Bobby, "it's my stom-
acn that hurts. " New York Herald.
Bra, J. JP. Hen, Omsatvatomie, Kan
wife of the editor of The Graphic, the lead
ing local paper of Hiatal county, writes
"X mn troubled urltH heart disease
for six years, severe palpitations, short
ness of breath, together with such ex
treme nervousness, that, at times I would
walk the floor nearly all night. We
consulted the best medical talent.
. Tfi-ei! said iZicre teas no ltelj for me,
that I had organic disease of the heart for
which there was no remedy. I had read
your advertisement in The Graphic and
a year ago, as a last resort, tried one bottle of
Dr. Miles Sew Cure for the Heart.
which convinced me that there was true
merit in it. I took three bottles each of the
Heart Cure and Restorative Nervine and
It completely cured tne. X sleep
well at night, my heart beats regularly and
I have no more smothering spells. I wish
to say to all who are suffering as I did:
there's relief untold for them if they will
only give your remedies Just one trial."
Dr. Hues Heart Cure is sold on a positive
guarantee that the first bottle will benefit
fiftnSBistaseU it at $1, 6 bottles for 85, or
5L fl?1 tLs?i.' Prepaid, on receipt of price
by the Dr. Hues Medical Co.. Elkhart, Ind.
DivMileslHeart Cure
WWttaefcelngO ganntes. "One cent a dose?
JsneUlT Mtath change.
SIP
of insects, reptiles, dogs and
cats, also the stings of
bees and wasps should be II
: a a a . 3 :-!. . .. . .
lnsumuy ucaicu wiut
1
Killer
The quickest and surest
remedy for pains, aches and
soreness of any kind. Used
everywhere for fifty years,
and sold everywhere this
year . Doubl a j!tf bnt nm quilt?-
una prim, dSo a botti. Be that Ton get ths
xenuin (Perrj Daris Baa) Fain-Killer.
KAII PairtCoes
VhenPAIH-KIUER
Comes!
Jnue 8 sa
SPIRITS TURPENTINE.
Laurinburg Exchange: Mrs.
Mary Phillips died at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. J. B. Cowan, of this
place, Friday evening, at the ripe old
age of eighty years.
. Monroe Journal : Mrs. Nancy
Winchester died at her home in Sandy
Ridge township on the 6th instant at
the age of 83 years. For fifteen years
she had been an invalid.
Raleigh Press-Visitor; Governor
Carr to-day offered a reward of $100 for
D. W. Justice, who as told several days
ago is charged with the cold-blooded
murder of Madison Quick on November
8d in Richmond county.
v Southport Leader: Wild swans
are more numerous in this vicinity this
season than for several years past.
They can be seen almost any day.
Black ducks can be found in pretty
good numbers in the bays opposite this
place.
Tarboro Southerner: On Wed
nesday of last week, George Washing
ton, Jr., was tried for the killing of Chas.
Neville and convicted of murder in the
first degree. The sentence as passed by
the Judge was that the prisoner be
hanged by the neck till dead on the 4th
day of December, 1895, at the place of
public execution.
Weldon News: The population
of the new manufacturing town of
Roanoke Rapids is now rapidly increas
ing. All of the dwellings are now occu
pied and there is a demand for more.
We learn that the Rapids people will
erect one hundred cottages at an early
day. The town is moving right ahead.
The knitting mill is in lull blast and
work on the big cotton mill is progress
ing.
Durham Sun: A telegram was
received bere this morning from Chapel
Hill announcing the death of Mr. John
Watson, of that place, which occurred
last evening. No particulars are given
and it is not known whether it was sud
den or after an illness. He was 77 years
of age. They are having a time of
it at Geer's Mills with eels, and they are
catching all they want not in traps.
nets or by hooks but in the turbine
wheels. Yesterday the mill came to a
standstill and upon examination it was
found that the water wheels were choked
up with eels. The miller took three
water buckets full out ot two wheels. .
Monroe Enquirer: Mrs. L. M.
Pyron, wife of Mr. J. C. Pyron, died at
her home near Ames, six miles east of
bere, on tne 10th instant, of consump
tion. On last Thursday the resi-
decce of Mr. C. M. Boyte. near Stout's
Station, was burned. The family were
away from home when the fire occurred
and it is thought that it was incendiary
origin. Nothing whatever was saved
Kev. I. M. Downum, of this place.
had a cow which was taken sick about
four months ago. The cow lingered until
last Saturday when she was killed and
dissected by Dr. J. B. Ashcraft and the
cause of her death was discovered. In
the cow's stomach were seven shingle
nails, a piece of wire, a ten-penny nail
and a pin. A large sewing needle was
sticking in one lobe of the heart.
A STUDY OF THUNDERSTORMS.
Facts About Their Distribution Set Forth
by Professor Klossovaky.
Professor Klossovsty of the University
of Odessa, having made a special study of
thunderstorms, has published a chart show
ing the distribution of such storms over
the known surface of the globe. It was
already known that thunderstorms aro
rare in high latitudes and unknown above
75 deccrees north. The electrical activity
of the earth near the poles seems to find
vent in auroral displays. In Europe the
frequency of thunderstorms increases as
the observer moves southward, and there
Is a somewhat irregular line of greatest
frequency encircling the globe near the
equator. The numoer lessens as one moves
southward from the equator, but not so
rapidly as in moving northward from that
line, and the region of strong auroral ac
tivity is much narrower in the southern
hemisphere than in the northern. The
frequency of tempests decreases rapidly in
going north or south from the equator in
the interior of the continents. There is a
line of demarcation between the region of
frequent and the region of rare tempests,
extending from the southwest to the
northeast. In the desert of Africa and
over Persia and the great area of central
Asia'thunderstorms are infrequent, the
total number in a given locality not ex
ceeding five or six annually. There is a
zone with a mean of five to ten tempests
annually enveloping the northern part of
European Russia, the southern part of the
Scandinavian peninsula and Great Britain.
while at the extreme northwest of the
Scandinavian peninsula and in Siberia the
mean descends to one, and even none.
In the American. continent the number
of tempests increases regularly in ap
proaching the equator, though here, as in
Europe and Asia, there are marked irregu
larities in certain regions. Africa, save at
points on the coast, is peculiarly free from
tempests. The maximum is reached in the
Bight of Benin. At Lima, Peru, light
ning is never seen. Here, however, earth
quakes are of almost daily occurrenoe, and
there seems to be a law that in countries
subject to earthquakes thunderstorms are
rare, or perhaps more accurately, where
thunderstorms are unknown earthquakes
are frequent. At Leon and Guanajuato,
Mexico, however, there are from 140 to
150 thunderstorms in the year. .
Professor Klossovsky finds that the fre
quency of thunderstorms in a given region
depends somewhat upon the conductivity
of the soil. Where the soil is a good con
ductor the electrical activity is easily dis
tributed without violence. Limestone
regions are subject to thunderstorms be
cause the soil' is not a good conductor of
electricity. He notes also that in the old
world, in latitude 62 degrees to 64 degrees
north, thunderstorms are more frequent
than in the same latitudes of the new world.
At the same time the region of auroral ac
tivity Is broader in the new world than in
the old.
Trying It 6a.
Tom (disappointed in love Well,
this settles it. For the remainder of my
days I shall live the life of a hermit.
Jack Don't say that, old man. Why
not compromise on moving over to
Brooklyn? New York Herald.
- TH UXLEY 'AND" TYN D ALL.
Their Scientiuo Expedition to the Alps
About Forty Tears Afo.
In 1856 -we made an expedition to
Switzerland, whioh" had;; a large in
fluence on Tyndall's future. In 1845
I had my first viow of a glaoier at
the head of the Lao de Gaube in the
Pyrenees, and when ten years later
I -was led to interest myself serious
ly in ceology in conneotion with the
study of fossils I read all I could lay
hands on about these curious rivers
of ice. At the same timeTyndall
was occupied with his important in
vestigations into the effects of pres
sure, in giving rise to lamination,
and I naturally heard a good deal
about what he was doing. It struck
me that his work might throw some
light upon the production of the
veined structure of glaoier ice, and
one day when he waa dining with
us I mentioned the notion that had
come into my head. The upshot
was that we then and there agreed
.to go and look into the facts of the
case for ourselves. More suo, he
would have nothing to do with speo
ulation till that essential preliminary
operation had been effected. To
Switzerland accordingly we went,
and I joined him at the Montanvert,
where he had taken up his quarters
with Dr. Hirst, who was, I think,
the closest of his friends.
In our time there was nothing but
a rough mountain auberge, opposite
to which on the glaoier side of the
road was a hut for guides. Into this
.Tyndall moved his bed, as he could
not bear the noise of the wooden
house. Accommodation and fare
were of the roughest. Our chef was a
singularly dirty woman, who met all
our suggestions about dinner with a
monotonous "C'est ca," as if the
stores of a Parisian restaurant were
at her disposal, while practically our
repasts were as uniform as her
speech. But as we used to start for
the Jardin or other of the higher
regions early and rarely returned
much before sunset there was no
lack of hunger sauce, while the con
diment which gives herbs a better
flavor than stalled oxen abounded.
Tyndall's skill and audacity as a
climber were often displayed in
these excursions. On one occasion,
I remember, we came upon a per
pendicular cliff of ice of considerable
height formed on the flank of the
glacier, which seemed to present a
good opportunity for the examina
tion of tho structure of the interior.
A hot sun loosening them, the stones
on the surface of the glacier every
now and then rattled down the face
of the cliff. As no persuasion of
ours could prevent Tyndall from as
cending the cliff by cutting steps
with his ax in order to get a close
view of . the ice, we had to content
ourselves with the post assigned to
us of looking out for stones. When
over any of theso seemed likely to
shoot too close, we shouted, and
Tyndall flattened himself against the
cliff. Happily no harm ensued, but
I confess I was greatly relieved when
my friend descended at his own
pleasure and not at that of ahance
fragment of rock.
The love for Alpine scenery and
Alpine climbing, which remained
with Tyndall to the last, began or at
any rate became intensified into a
passion with this journey, and at
the same time ho laid tho founda
tions of his well known and highly
important work upon glaciers apd
glacier movement. His first paper
on this subject was presented to the
Eoyal society in 1857 and bears my
name as well as his own in spite of
all my protests to tho contrary, for
beyond two or three little observa
tions and perhaps some criticism I
contributed nothing toward it, and
all that is important,; is Tyndall's
own. But ho was singularly scrupu
lous, even punctilious, on points of
scientifio honor. It would have been
intolerable to him to have it sup
posed that he had used, even sugges
tions of others without acknowledg
ment, so I, being thicker skinned,
put up with the possibility of being
considered a daw in borrowed
plumes. Huxley in Nineteenth Cen
tury. A Good Woman.
A bright young American girl
spent last summer with her parents
in England. Her father was much
interested in charitable work and
visited many institutions for the
poor and aged on the trip. Most of
these buildings, particularly in the
provinces, have a square piece of
marble inserted in the bricks over
the front entrance, giving the year
of its building.
The little girl read many of these
and one day said, "Papa, I think
Anno Domini must have been an
awfully good woman to have built
all these houses for the poor. New
York Herald.
Russian Universities.
Russia ha3 only 14,619 university
students with a population of 120,
000,000, according to The Russkaya
Schkola, or 120 to 1,000,000, while
Germany; with 50,000,000 inhabit
ants, has 25,000 students; Moscow
is the largest university, with 3,967
students ; St. Petersburg comes next,
with 2,675. The 1,176 at Warsaw
are almost exclusively Poles and the
1,555 at Dorpat Germans.
fiacttlen'si Arnlcsi salve.
Ths Best Salve in the world lor
Cuts, Bruises, Sores. Ulclers, Salt
Rheum, Fever Sores. Tetter, Chapped
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
Eruptions and positively cures Piles, or
no pay required. It is guaranteed to
eive ncrfect satisfaction or money re
funded. Price 25 cents per box. For
sale bv R R Bellamy t
For Over Fifty Years
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, and is the bes remedy
for Diarrhoea. It win relieve tbe poor
little suffdrer immediately. Sold by
druggists in every part of tbe world.
Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and
ask for Mrs. Winslow s Soothing Syrup,"
and take no other kind t
Old People.
to
regulate the bowels and kidneys will find
the true remedy in Electric Bitters. This
medicine does not stimulate and contains
no whiskey or other intoxicant, bnt acta
as a tonic and alterative. It acts mildlv
on the stomach and bowels, adding
Bircngia ana giving ione to tne organs,
thereby aiding nature in the performance
of the functions. Electric Bitters is an
excellent appetizer and aids digestion.
Old People find it fast erartiv vhg tt,.
need. Price fifty cents per bottle at R
. uuuwi s isrug aiore.
IiIp
Sift one (mart if floor. twa'MimrlfnB tea.
: spoonfuls of baking; powder, and on MSx
; spoonful of salt into a bowl; add three tea
: spoonfuls of (JOTTOtENE and rub to-
gether until tnorouffhly mixod; than add
: surfioient milk te mau a soft dono-h ; knaad
sliehtir, roll out about half an inch thick,
! and cut with a small biscuit outter. Plae a
: little apart in a creased pan, and bake In a
i O'-iick oven for fifteen or twenty minutes.
Them biscuits should be a delicate brown top
; and bottom, lieht on the sides, and snowy
j white when broken open.
- The secret of success in this re
; cipe, as in others, . is to use but
two-thirds as much Cottolene as
i you used to use of lard.
mm
will make the biscuit light, deli-
riona. wholrsome. Better than anv
R -1 i . .
Discuir. you ever maae ueiore. xiy
it. Be sure and get genuine Cotto
lene. Sold everywhere in tins with
trade-marks " Cottolene " and
steer's head in cotton-plant wreath
on every tin. '
THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY,
St. louis ana Chicago.
DOT 6 tf
tu th sa
change
, A Wonderful Woman.
Not all thewomon of the last generation
were mindless dolls. There was, for in
stance, Miss Phoebe Brown of Matlock,
England, as noted by William Hutton in
1801. Her common dress was a man's hat,
ooat, with a spencer above it, and men's
shoes. She could lift a hundredweight
with either hand and carry 14 stone. Her
voice was more than masculine; it was
deep toned, and, the wind in her face, she
could send it a mile. Yet she had no
beard. She could sew, knit, cook, spin,
but hated them all. She accepted any kind
of manual labor, but her favorite avoca
tion was breaking in horses at a guinea a
week. She was an excellent judge of a
cow and shot accurately with a gun. Her
chief food was milk, and she was fond of
Milton, Pope and Shakespeare. This ad
mirable female also performed neatly on
the flute, violin, harpsichord " and bass
viol. She could cover easily 40 miles a
day, and when a gentleman at the New
Bath treated her rudely she said that "she
had a good mind to havo knocked him
down." New York Tribune.
The Vesuvius Path.
An improved path has been made up
Vesuvius which starts from Pompeii. It
is managed by the directors of the Hotel
Diomede at Pompeii, and to a good pedes
trian the labor is not excessive. The ascent
is made on ponies to the base of the cone,
the same as in the cable road on the other
side of the mountain, but the cone itself
is reached on foot.
' Two Lives Saved.
Mrs. Phoebe Thomas, of Junction
City, 111., was told by her doctors she
had Consumption, and that there was
no nope tor her, but two bottles of Dr,
King's New Discovery completely cured
her, and she sys it saved her life. Mr,
Thos. Eggers, 139 Florida St. San Fran
cisco, suffered from a dreadful cold, ap
proaching Consumption, tried without
result everything else then bought one
bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery and
in two weeks was cured. He is naturally
thankful. It is such results, of which
these are samples, that prove the won
derful efficacy of this medicine in Coughs
and Colds. Free trial bottles at R. R.
Bellamy's Drug Store. Regular size
50c and 81.00. t
Wholesale Prices Current.
fVThe following quotations represent Wholesa
Prices generally. In making np small orders highe
prices have to be charsced.
Tbe annotations are aiwavs nvea as acmratetv A
possible, bnt the Star will not be responsible for any
variations from the actual market price of the articles
quoted.
BAGGING
2-lb J rite..
Standard..
WESTERN SMOKED
Hams lb
Sides 8 t
Shoulders 9 B
DRY SALTED
Sides V B
Shonlders S tt.. ,
BARRELS Spirits Turpentine
Second-hand, each ............
New New York, each..........
New City, each.
BEESWAX B
BRICKS .
Wilmington, V M...
Northern
BUTTER
North Carolina, V b
Northern .....................
CORN MEAL
Per boshel, in sacks
Virginia Meal
COTTON TIES V bundle
CANDLES 9
Sperm ,.
Adamantine
CHEESE V lb
Northern Factory . ,
Dairy, Cream
State
COFFEE 9 t
Lagcyra..,.. ......... ........
Rio .
DOMESTICS
Sheeting, 4-4, yard
Yarns, fl bunch. ..... .........
EGGS 9 dozen...,.,...,,....,,,
riSB
Mackerel. No. 1, $ barrel
Mackerel, No. I, $ half-barrel
Mackerel, No. 2 9 barrel. ....
Mackerel, No, S half-barrel
Mackerel, No. 8, 9 barrel,,..
14
7
6
5
o
I 10
1 85 1 40
1 40
a 27
6 50
9 00
15
23
7 00
14 00
45
50 45
85
18 28
9 10
10
11
....
87
20
i5j$a
11
12
10
28
23
20
6 :6M
18 80
10 1234
22 00
11 00
16 00
8 00
13 00
8 25
6 00
3 50
R
8 25
SO 00
15 00
& 18 00
9 00
14 on
8 50
8 50
3 25
a io
3 50
Mallets, v barrel
Mallets, M pork barrel ,
N. C. Roe Herring 9 keg.....
uiyuxi.v ,
" Extra..
FLOUR 9 barrel-
Low grade
Choice, 2 75
Straight 375
8 00
3 00
3 85
K Ual rHICUl .................... .
GLUE 9
GRAIN 9 bushel
Corn, from store, bags White.
Corn, cargo, in bulk White.. .
Corn, cargo, In bags White. . .
Oats, from store..,,,,,,,,.....
Oats, Rust Proof,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Cow Peas ,,
HIDES, 9 -
Green ,.
Dry
HAY, 9 100 tts
Eastern
Western
North River.
HOOP IRON, 9
LARD, 9
Northern ......
North Carolina, ,,,
4 25
&7K 10
47H " 45
47lt 45
47)4 45
35
45
63 60
.... 6
.. 8
.... 1 00
90
85
2 iH
SH 0
0 3 10
LIME, 9 barrel 126
LUMBER(city sawed) 9 M feet
Ship Stnfi, resawed IS 00 20 00
Rough-Edge Plank. 15 00 16 00
West India cargoes, according
toquality. 18 00 18 00
Dressed Flooring, seasoned.... 18 00 22 00
Scantling and Board, common. . 14 00 a 15 00
MOLASSES, 9 gallon
New Crop Cnba, in hhds ......
" inbbls
Porto Rico, in hhds,
" " in bbl
Sugar-House, in hhds.
? " in bbls ..........
Syrup, lub&ls
NAILS, 9 keg- Cnt.BOd basis ....
PORK, 9 barrel
City Mess r....
Rnmv
Prime
ROPE.sp lb , '
SALT Wsack Alum "
1 iverpool ,
Lisbon
Anerican . ... ...
on 125 9 Sacks
SHINGLES 7-inch, 9 M
Common
Cypress Sapj.....
Cypress Hearts
SUGAR. 9 Standard Graon'd
23
as
25
1
....
13 a
?7H
an
14
15
26
2 SO
10 EOail 00
10 00
10 00
10 22
.... 75
65
65
45
7 00
2 SB
5 00
7 50
40
5 00
2 00
4 50
&
5
White Ex. c!!
ExtraC. Golden
4
3 00
9
C, Yellow
SOAP, fc Northerr. ......
STAVES, M W. O. Barrel
14
10 00
k. J. Hogshead ...
TIMBER, & M feet Shipping.. . 30
Mill, Prime'. 00
Mill, Fair 6 60
Common Mill......... 4 00
Inferior to Ordinal-. ., ....... 300
TALLOW. & fc 5
WHISKEY, & gallon Northern. . 1 00
9 00
7 00
4 60
5 60
3 00
norm vJironna ...100 n
WOOL, ft fc Washed . . 14 g
COMMERCIAL
W 1 l, M I N O T O N MAR V
STAR OFFICE, Nov. 15.
NAVAL STORES.
SPIRITS TURPENTINE. Steady
at Zi cents per gallon for country and
25 cents for machine-made casks.
KOS1N. Market firm at tl 25 per
bbl for Strained and $1 80 for Good
Strained..
TAR. Market steady at tl 20 per
bbl of 280 fis.
CRUDE TURPENTINE.-, Market
quoted on 'Change quiet at tl 10 for
tiara, si do tor Yellow Dip and SI 60 for
Virgin. Inspectors quote Hard at 81 25:
Virgin and Yellow Dip,$l 60.
U uotatlons same day last year spirits
turpentine 25c; rosin, strained, $0.95;
good strained jl 00, tar $1 25; crude
turpentine $1 10, 1 50, 1 70,
. RECEIPTS.
Spirits Turpentine....... 227
Kosin 776
Tar 854
Crude Turpentine 20
Receipts same day last year 96
casks spirits turpentine, 642 bbis rosin,
234 bbls tar, 122 bbls crude turpentine.
COTTON MARKET.
Quiet on a basis of 8c for Mid
dling. Quotations:
Ordinary 5 cts $ Tb
Good Ordinary 6 " "
Low Middling. 7 9-16 ' "
Middling.. 8 " "
Good Middline...... 8 5-16 " "
Same day last year, middling 5c.
Receipts 1,643 bales; same day last
year 1,804.
COTTON AND NAVAL STORES.
WEEKLY BTATKMTT.TTT.
RECEIPTS.
For week ended Nov. 15, 1895
Cittern. Spirit: Rttin. Tar. Crude
7,753 979 4,433 2.275 261
RECEIPTS.
For week ended Nov. 16, 1894.
Cttte. Sfiritt. Rttin. Tar. Crxdt.
7,304 705 3,338 1,856 353
EXPORTS.
For week ended Nov. 15, 1885.
Cotton. Spirit!. Rosin. Tar. Crude:
Domestic.. 260 725 267 733 133
Foreign... 4,S!75 000 0l0 COO 000
4,535 725 267 731 133
EXPORTS.
For week ended Nov. 16, 1894.
Cotton. Spirits. Rosin. Tar. CrueU.
Domestic.. 727 552 46 1,085 25
Foreign... OHO 000 03 000 00
727
67J 46
1,C85
25
STOCKS.
Ashore and Afloat, Nov. 15, 1895.
Ashtrt. Afloat.
Total.
12,204
5,925
40,070
7.0E4
401
Cotton 12,157
Spirits.... 5,e89
Rosin 35,495
Tar 7,054
Crude 401
9,047
36 4,575
000
0CO
STOCKS.
Ashore and Afloat, Nov. 16,1891.
Cotton. Spirits. Rosin. Tar.
28,353 1,900 34,782 3.417
Cruit.
965
QUOTATIONS.
Nov. 15. 1895. Nov. 16, 1894.
Cotton.... 8c 5
Spirits.... 219625J6 '25 J4
Rosin.... 1 251 30 $1.00(1.05
Tar 1 20 1 10
Crude. ... SI 10, 1 5:1 60 $1 10. 1 501 70
DOMESTIC MARKETS.
By Telegraph to the Morning Star
FINANCIAL.
New York, November 15.- Evening
Money on call was easy at
last loan at 1 and closing offered at
per cent. Prime mercantile paper was
5 514 percent. Sterling exchange was
firm; actual business in bankers' bills
at 487 483 for sixty days and 489&
4894 for demand. Commercial bills
486jH487. Government bonds steady;
United States coupon fours 112J;
United States twos 97. State bonds
quiet; North Carolina fours 104; North
Carolina sixes 124. Railroad bonds
were irregular.
Silver e.i ths Stock Exchange to-day
was dull.
COMMERCIAL.
New YORK, November 15 Evening
Cotton quiet; middling gulf 8 ll-16c;
middling 8 7-16c.
Cotton futures market closed weak;
November 8 01, December 8 02, Ianu
ary 8 07, February 8 13; March 8 17;April
8 22, May 8 26, Tune 8 30. July 8 32.
August 8 34, September .October 7 97.
Sales 833,200 bales.
Cotton net receipts 468 bales; gross
8,554 bales; exports to Great Britain
bales; to France bales; to the
Continent 250 bales; forwarded 1,097
bales; sales bales, sales to spinners 437
bales; stock (actual) 175.465 bales.
Weekly Net receipts 3,699 bales;gross
34,558 bales; exports to Great Britain 12 -457
bales; to France 654 bales; to the
Continent 10,527 bales; forwarded 46,190
bales; sales bales; sales to spinners
2,599 bales.
Total to-day-Net receipts 62.407 bale's;
exports to Great Britain 28.272 bales;
to France 128 bales; to the Continent
80,422 bales; stock 944,923 bales.
Total so far this week Net receipts
230,429 bales.exports to Great Britain 83.
843 bales; to France 17,961 bales; to the
Continent 57,242 bales.
Total since September 1 Net re
ceipts 2,025.030 bales; exports to Great
Britain 513,524 bales; exports to France
122,118 bales; exports to the Continent
441,125 bales.
, New YORK, Nov. 15.-Evening. Flour
was dull and barely offered; winter
wheat,low grades $2 252 75;fair to fancy
$2 80340;patents&3 503 90;Minncsota
clear 88 753 25; patents $3 354 10;
low extra $2 252 75; city mills ;.
do patents ; Southern flour was dull
and easy; common to fair extra $2 10
2 80; good to choice $2 903 30.
Wheat spot fairly active, firm; No 2 red
in store and at elevator 66c; afloat
options were moderately active and
irregular, closing steady at lc decline:
No. 2 red January 65c; Mav 67c;
June 67c; July 67Mc; December 64c.
Corn spot quiet and )c lower, closme
firm; No. 2 at elevator 3636c; t float
87c; steamer mixed 35c; No 2 35
35c; options tiu.l and steady at
)c decline; November 86c; December
85fc; January 85&C; May 85c. Oats
spot quiet and steady; options dull and
easier; November 23c; December 23$.
May 25c; spot prices No. 2 23Jc;
No 2 white 24c; mixed Western 24J.
Hay firm and fairly active; spring 75c;
good to choice 87J$90. Wool quiet and
firm; domestic fleece 1622c; pulled
1534c; Texas - . Beef slow and firm;
family $9 00 12 00; extra mess $7 50
8 00; beef bams quiet at $14 0014 50;
tierced beef dull, steady; city extra India
meS3 $17 C019 00; cut meats auiet;
pickled bellies 55c; shoulders" 5,
6c; bams 8&8c; middles nominal.
Lard quiet and weak; Western steam
15 85 asked; city $5 555 60; November
(5 90 asked; refined in fair demand: Con
tinent 86 30; South America f6 65; com
pound $4 504 87J. Pork quiet, steady;
mess $9 7510 25. Butter quiet; fancy
steady: State dairy 122ic; do creamery
1722c; Western dairy 1016c; El
gins 23c. Eges firm, with light receipts;
State and Pennsylvania 2226c; ice
house 1620c; do per esse $3 504 25;
Western fresh 2123fc; do per case
$3 504 25; limed 16K17c; do per case
$3 504 00. Tallow firm: city 4JbC;
country 44J$c. Cottonseed oil strong,
quiet; crude 2526c; new yellow prime
80c; do off grade 2829c. Rice was
sieaay ana quiet; domestic, fur to
extra 8&6c; Japan 38&c. Mo
lassesforeign nominal; New Orleans,
open kettle good to choice 2632c.
dull and steady. Peanuts quiet. Coffee
quiet and unchanged to 5 points up;
uecemoer si4o; January si4 3U: March
$13 9514 00;May $13 60; spot Rip- dull
but steady; No. 7 $15 25. Sugar raw
sieaay out, guii; renning 3c; refined quiet
and steady; off A 41-16a4K'c: standard
A 4Kc; granulated 4$4c$ cut-loaf
W crusnea omc. freients to Liver.
pool quiet; grain firm;cotton per steamer
8-82d; grain per steamer Sitfd askprf
Chicago, November 15 Caan quota
tions: Flour was quiet. Wheat Nc 2
spring 56&57&c; No 2 red 57 V 6li
E?,n-N?-,8 S8K29Jfc. OaS-No 8
I8Kc Mess pork, per bbl. $8 10a
8 20. Lard, per 100 lbs. $5 57J5 60
Short rib sides, per 100 lbs $4 504 55
Dry salted shoulders per boxes 100 lbs
$4754 87tf. Short clear sides, boxed
per 100 lbs, $4 75487K. Whiskey per'
xhc leading lutures ranged as foiiows
opening, highest, lowest ana closing
Wheat No. 2 November 5657, 57U
66, 56c; December 57K57f. 57
WM.OTHc; May 61612. 6162"
6lf6c Corn November 29, 29
28&, 28c; December 28. 28. 27V, 27&
January 27, 21, 27. 27; May 29'
29K.29&. 29c? Oa?s-No.2Novem-'
ber 18, 18, 18, 18c; December 18U, 18U
18, 18; May 20, 2020M720X
20. 2020c. Mess pork, per b&f
December $8 07, 8 07, 8 07. 8 07 -January
$9 07. 9 10, 9 07. 9 07;May
$9 42. 9 45. 9 42. 9 42. IrVpr
100 lbs, November $5 47, 5 47.5 47U
547; January $5-62, 5 62. 5 60
5 62; May $5 82, 58 85.5 82. 5 82.'
Short ribs, per 100 lbs, November $4 45
4 45.4 45, 4 45; January $4 57. 4 67
457, 4 57; May $4 80,4 82$. 4 80 '
482.
Baltimore. Nov. 15. Flour dul!.
Wheat steady; No. 2 red spot and No
vember 6464c; December 65
65&c; May 69e9c; Steamer No. 2
red 6161c. Southern by sample 65
66c; do on grade 6164. Corn
firm; mixed spot 37c bid; November 86c
bid; November (new and old) 35
86c; year 3434Jsc; January 34U
84c; February 8434c; Steamer
mixed 3585c; Southern white
8437c; do yellow 3337c. Oats quiet;
No. 2 white Western 2323c; No
2 mixed do 2223c.
COTTON MARKET S
By Telegraph to the Morning Star.
Nov. 15.-Galveston, steady at 8c,
net receipts 4,789 bales; Norfolk, quiet at
8c, net receipts 1,452 bales; 'Balti
more, steady at 8c. net receipts 1,878
bales; Boston, quiet at 8 9 16, net re
ceipts 1,234 bales; Wilmington, quiet at
8c,net receipts 1,223 bales; Philadeiph a.
quiet at 8 ll-16c. net receipts 404 bait s.
Savannah, easy at 8 l-16c, net receipts
4,845 bales; Mew Orleans, quiet at
8 l-16c. ret receipts 12,870 bales; Mo
bile, easy at 8c net receipts 968 bales;
Memphis, dull at 8c. net receipts 3,304
bales; Augusta, steady at 8c, net receipts
988 bales; Charleston, steady at 8c. net
receipts 2,494 bales. '
FOREIGN MARKET;.
B Cabis to tit Sdora ,i S..-.
Liverpool, Nov. 15. 12.30 P. M.
Cotton, good business done and prices
easier. American middling 4 9-16d.
Sales 15,0(0 bales, of which 14,100 wertr
American; speculation and export 1,000.
Receipts 6,000 bales, of which 5,600
were American. Futures cpened- firm
and demand good. American mid
dling (1 m c) November and Decem
ber 4 23-64d; December and January
4 26-644 24-64d; January and Febru
ary 4 26-64. 4 24-64, 4 23-644 22 64d;
February and March 4 27-64, 4 25 64
4 24-64d; March and April 4 28 61.
4 27-64, 4 26-64, 4 25 644 24-64d;
April and May 4 27-644 25-64d; May
and June 4 31-64, 4 29-644 28-C4d;
July and August 4 30-644 29 64d. Fu
tures easy at the decline.
Tenders of cotton for delivery to-day
were 600 bales new dockets and
bales old dockets.
4 P M American spot grades d low
er. American middling la;r 4 31-S2d;
good middling 4 9-16d; middling 4 7
16d; low middling 4 10 32d; good ordi
nary 4 7-32d; ordinary 4 1 32d. No
vember 4 Zd 64d seller; Novemoer and
December 4 23 64d seller; December
and January 4 23-64d seller; Janra-v
and Fhriinrn i 2.1 f54.fi cpIIpi- Pchrnm
and March 4 23 644 24-64d binei;
March and April 4 24 644 25 64d
seller; April and May 4 26 64d snlrr:
May and June 4 27-64d seller; June n?
Tuly 4 28-64d value; July and August
4 29-64d buyer; August and Septerr.bt r
4 28 644 29 64d seller. Futures closed
easy.
Liverpool, Nov. 15. The following
are the weekly cotton statistics: Total
sales of the week 84,000 bales, American
75,000;. .trade takings, including for
warded from ships' side, 74,000; actual
exports 40,000; total imports 99,000,
American 72.000; total stocks 933.000;
American 799,000; total afloat 169.000;
American 160,000; speculators took 5 400;
exporters took 5,100.
MABIRB.
ARRIVED.
Steamer D Murchison, Robeson, Fay
etteville, James Madden.
Br steamer Mourne. 2,092 tons, Aiken,
Belfast, Ireland, Alex Sprunt & Son.
CLEARED.
Steamer D Murchison. Robeson. Fav
etteville, James Madden.
MARINE DIRECTORY.
List of Vessels In tb fort ot v -rainstoii,
N. C, Nov. 16, I8T.5.
STEAMSHIPS.
Valencia (Br), 606 tons, Roberts, Alex
Sprunt & Son.
Kirkby, (Br). 1,796 tons, Spence. Alex
Sprunt & Son.
Eastry (Br). 1924 tons. Wattley. Alrx
Sprunt & Son.
SCHOONERS.
R S Graham, 325 tons, Geo Harriss.Son
& Co.
Amelia P Schmidt, 266 tons. Pasbley.
Geo Harriss, Son & Co.
Navarmo, 279 tons.Warner, Geo Harriss.
Son & Co.
BARQUES.
Flora (Nor), 505 tons, Stevenson, Heic"e
&Co.
Amarcs (Get). 466 tfns, Rachkn, E
Peschau & Co.
Emma Bauer (Get). 536 tons, Niemann,
Heide & Co.
Augusia (Nor), 512 tons. Langlie, P..i
C!S3n. Dowrjing & Co.
Korg Sverre(Ncr),474 tors. laser), Fir de
&0-.
Arc-mus (No-). 663. loos, To-.r.t-Jsen.
Paterson, Downing & Co.
Guyda (Not). 657 tous. lohrsen. Hi ide &
Co.
Hans(Ssi). 680 tuns. Lsnander. Heide &
Co
BRIGS.
Sullivan, 295 toes, Allec, Geo Harms.
Son & Co.
Old Newspapers.
YOU CAN BUY OLD NEWSPAPERS, in quan
titles to suit.
At Your Own Price,
At the STAR Office.
Suitable for WRAPPING PAPER, and
Excellent for Placing Under Carpets
P Chichester's English Diamond Brand.
EHHYROYAL PILLS
JVAiK Orictnal and Only eennine.
wi-K-r a4nsjr icuauii:, uiuils ua ,
Drunrlst for CkichrJttnr a Enalish Itia- A
mond Brand in Ked and Gold metal
gDoxea, K&iea with blse ribbon. Take
'tUm and imitations. At Druezisisj.orfend?.
in stamps for particular, testtnioai:! 3 l
k. teller ior iantw, nr reitcm-
Mail. 1 (LHOO Testimonial. AVitne Paw.
ap 4 th sa tu
SANTAL-G1DV
Arrests discharges from tha urinary organ
In either aez in 48 hoars.
It la superior to Copaiba, Cubeb, or Injec
tions, and free from all bad smell or other
moonyeTuencea,
SANTAL-MiDYtotoS5i
Wt
(female irtdcli bear tht name ia blac
Gttffra. wtthoot which nope y enuiD
mm
apstf