. I'uUIIstker" AiflouuceiuHi. ;; 1 OS MORinNQ STAR, tbtr Oldest Xlly BOW; i aperi In North Carolliia,la pabllsheddaU;rexoept o llay. at 00 per year, S3 00 for six toontha, a 5 for three months; 60 etc tor one month, to m ii( nabsoribers. - DeUTered cltymbBortbers at tiw rate of IS cents per week tor any period . Croat one week to one year.-'?- ; :;:v-i w--; T&& WZ3KLY STAB 1 published erery Friday noralnjr at $1 03 per year, 60 eta, tor els month, SO ate for three months. . ' ADVKRTISrjrO BATES (DAILYV-'-One ona day, $1 00; two daya, fl 75; three days, 8 50; ur days, $3 00: flrodaya. M: one week $400. wo weeks, $8 50 : three weeks 60; one month, fid 00; two months, $17 00 ; three monUjav$400j MS morons, mvt uv; wwmwm hquuib V Un.es of soM Nonpareil type make one square. - All announcements of Vain, Peettrals,i Hops, Pto-Nlos, Society Meetliijo Political Meet lnjrs Acwlll be charged regular adyertlalns rates Notices nnaer neaa oi city nems- w w y line for first Insertion, and 15 eenta per line for j each sabseqnent Insertion.' No advertisements Inserted In Local Column at any prtoe. Advertisements Inserted once a week In Dally ; Will be charged 81 00 per square for each Insertion. Every other day, three fourths of dally rate. Twloe a week, two thirds of daily rata. . Communications, unless they ooataln Impox- Mtrr other war. thav ibly be .thheld. re looted U the real name of the author Is wit " An extra charge will be made for doable-column v Notioes of Marriage or Death, Tribute of Be ? speot, Resolutions of Thanks, Ac, are cnarrad ,for as ordinary advertisements, but only naif rate f when paid for strictly in advance. At this rato 50 cents will pay f or a simple announcement of u. Marriage or Death, ' Advertisements on which no specified number 0. a . 1 , ,, a...al Ctm ' bid," at the option of the publisher, and charged up to tie date of discontinuance. Amusement, Auction and Official advertisements - , one dollar per square for each Insertion. - Advertisements to rouow reaping mamer, w,w ;6ooupyany special place, will be charged extra v aooordmg to the position desired - Advertisements kept under the head of "New V: ioveraseraent8" win be charged fifty per cent. ..I extra. ';. , " Advertisements discontinued before the time , contracted for has expired, charged transient . . i- M .LJI J a.T1 .VlUkAl .... jxfea xor umo aobiuuAy yuuxiowu. d made tn advano. Known parties, or Strang era WUQ proper reierenoe nujpsy uiunuuj ur muw- ' All annonnoexnents and reoommendatlonB of ' .. J4 aL M aa - - t..lt... JK A.. - V A .: oommunloatlons o? otherwise, will be oharged as ' advertisements. ceed their space or advertise any thing foreign to ' .their regular business without extra charge at Bemlitanoes most be made by Check, Draft. i ' Foetal Honey Order, Sxpress, or in Registered risk of the publisher. t f atwijfl Haflfaft tr, tyopt loaa i-n w nam ha lib .i. i Li a . a. J via , ; advertlBement Is in, the proprietor will only be , raffoonslbls for the mulling of the oaner to his ad : dress. i Tli a lUnrninnr stcir By WIXIiIASI II. BEXtNABD. ' r1 "Bar n i-kfllW : An inrAUVus Ann dkivws. nif CORD. - n oi " i- 1 iL urea, -oueriuau, tsiuce urraub a uestu, ia nntiT (no NArfharn tHl HA la ineir iavonie ivdb oi a uuiuier. ui .i " r . -e. u: nc it a. . .11 -1 'a 1 1 couree ue never leiia ioe truiu wueu falsenooa will answer nis purpose. . lie bas been again and again exposed . - IU UIB UlCUUitUllijr, JJUb iIt IiUIO uuco :r .not lower mm, in tne least, jonn " Shovmnn Vim oh a h.Afha. hso nrnmn UUClUiaU, aJ ID a. UVU aftVVava, La b.aa Cl.U n U , to be a millionaire on a salary of $5,000 and $8,000 a year, but such ii incr its i.ha wit h hiH nartv. - y uuci uiau uiaiviucu tu iuo oca xi&o ..ictiv u..uuvu w . vavuv - later! hnmoa anrJ wABtpn tioirla Ha is the Modern broth. JJo you '---' tViint wa praortrAratA - in tViA lAoaf: 1. and misrepresent the facts in any Twi h Lrrtnwn tartts ; We will show what sort of Rmdipr -r fare he proposed, what his views of war were. vv e will ao tnis irom nis ewn writings. In 1864, Sherman : wrote to Thomas . - jl want au mines Dent to ttne, pan. l mimofie to demnnatrate the vnlnArahilitv nf . . kua. war auu lhuiyiuuajj auik are irynony- ; mow terms." til: : a. i i . iia .t . j luw in mo j".ot uitu oi 1,110 mne- ... tecum licu'jixiy, xuoiuau W liU WlUbO a . a, . a RH . ; mauia uiaukueaiieu auu a uisgracs a 1 . a ' . I 1 1 1 a 1 -, - ; Am . I AX7 . 17 i - xxe eays in anotner tetter to -v , Thomas: "We have now a eood enterine wedee. ULaV. DUUU1U li tUV ttV ILVJltC. N He says Beauregard will be unable .'- '-v - ... . V. dntl.. 1 ' nhnnM Ju oama " "against his infernal vandalism, and is nappy over it evidently, .wow - comes an order that is laconic and is - 'worthy of Attila or the bloodiest . 'minded Indian. with hands dripping .-.-with the blood of his victims: V .Capt, Poa: j You may commence the work of de- : ilruciion at once, but don't use fire until - lowarus tne last moment. - "Shebkau' ' ' iThis is his order for burning At- - v lanta. And yet the villain has de nied his cruelties. He wrote to Washington as follows: . : vIf my reasons are satisfactory to the ' ; United States, it makes no diSerenee CrA whether it pleases General Hood and fas " peopU or not.". . . This ruffian in uniform is gloating - over: .the prospect of wide-spread " desolation, . ruin, Buffering, among H the people in the line of his march. " rf-iefore leaving Atlanta he wrote: v The problem of this war consists in the " j- awful : fact that the present class of men ; ; who rule the South must be killed out- .:;?-f"v ; .---- ; , . - Here open murder is proclaimed as the ; true polioy and he evidently .' meant-to nursue it; aa far sr ho eould , No. Comanche . Indian ever had less of f'the milk of human kindr ness" than .this red-handed murderer, Tecumseh Sherman.; ;;He is ;,well On 10tb-Sept. ?be wrote to Grant: j "Icanneeejt the wbol6tate of Georgia.' gHedoye MtlSt sixty thoasand men began Jbi8wfamoa8 and infamous march' to the sea. :s He issued an order creating a corps of Bummers.- We have not a copy but the reader can find it ia a North: ern history by no less tinman than. jrrot. jonn w., draper. At is in uw two volume work and we have read the order. - We have been oopying the extracts from Sherman from the North Ame- rioan 'Heview for September. . The article is by S. H. M. Byera.: That writer says: r "Every twentieth man in the army was regularly detailed to scour . the countey tive silencing of Deinocratiri voters io; and defendant failed to make se f old fo 1 aa'ys'K &e in the North. - Senator Wallace of lection, and thereW the comini.- greater number of these loragers -. naa mounted themselves on some species of horse or mule, and the. 'foragers' became a sort of irregular, or partisan cavalry fly ing hither and thither, at all times and m all places. They confiscated horses, mules, cattle, pigs, sheep, poultoy, grain, fodder, potatoes and meat in such enormous quan tities as to supply the whole army. Only occasionally were the regular rations in the supply trains touched at all. The army was living completely off the country. The corn Jefferson Davis had ordered planted in the cotton-fields, was feeding Sherman's soldiers. The foragers' were hecoming the historic personages of the campaign. They were men accustomed to danger, to impro vising defenses, to fighting on foot or mounted, to ambuscades and open fields; soldiers of infinite resources, and it is doubt ful if any cavalry in existence could have been half so useful to the army as Sher man's mounted 'foragers . ' Their irregula rities, and they were not great, for discip line met them when they came to camp, were overlooked in the good that they ac complished ." Sherman destroyed as he advanced. He said a crow could not live on the J line of his march. He first devasta ted Georgia and then played the same awful havoc in South Caro lina, demolishing every thing and burning Columbia on the way. He entered North Carolina, and although he behaved better than he had done, Wan6T his Bummers pillaged and J devoured and destroyed no little. Air. Byers is in error as to one point. He says Sherman reached Roanoke river or its neighborhood. This is a mistake. He never got nearer to Roanoke than Goldsboro, and the latter is some eighty miles distant from the river. He says Sherman was but eighteen miles from Rich mond when the evacuation took place. Sherman was one hundred and sixty-three miles from Rich mond. thSJipheb bumbcjg. Wewere amused over an article in the November North American Review on Those Wonderful Ci phers." The writer is Arthur D. Vinton. He discusses four ciphers and they are extremely ridiculous. How any sane mind can waste time over such foolery is beyond us. In discussing Clark's cipher and the epitaph of Shakespeare Mr. Vinton shows that with him, as with other alleged "literary experts," originated thoughts not to be found in Bacon's works, and that Clark makes the great jurist and philosopher tell false hoods, set np false claims, and in J dulgein "utterly unimportan" frivo- I Ions, and triflinc" nnmmnn Mtinni) For instance, Bacon, according to Clark, utterly misuses the term "embracery." He was bribed him self as a judge, and yet Clark makes Bacon confess that he was an "em bracer" that is, that he bribed others. Mr. Vinton says: "He was a judge, the highest judicial atgnitary oi tne readers, and he took bribes, but he never tampered with a jury. Em bracery is not, and never was, as Mr. Clark states, 'the old legal term for judicial cor ruption,' nor has Lord Bacon ever 'come down in history as au Embracer.' " The point is, Clark by his supposed cipher finds Bacon confessing to what he was never suspected of or accused of doing.and he makes the great law yer ignorant of a law term, while him self showing ignorance of Bacon's historic record, Clark is only familiar with a cheap and imperfect edition of Bacon's "De Augmentis." Vinton shows that in the famous passage relied upon by all of the cipher manipulators Clark's edition omits an .important passage. The words of the first chapter of the sixth book are as follows: "But 10 prevent all suspicion, we shall here annex a cipher (or inven tion) of our own, which we devised in Paris in our youth; which still seem to me worthy of preservation." iTh nrnuaA ia vA a.i The part omitted is the last clause. Bacon invented; he - says, a cipher when young and he atill regards it "worthy of preservation." . But Ba con stole the very cipher he pretend ed to originate. Mr. Vinton says: "Now, in point of fact, this very cipher -wnicn aoacon ciaimea aa original wltn Him self, is Jound described in two books, the first written by Porta and arst printed in 1563 (when Bacon was three veara old) and reprinted in Strasbourg in 160ft; and - the wona written ny ie vigenere, and pub- uaueu id jraru in iota.., ltv is certainly amueins: to know that the Baconian rebus -mongers are using a plagiarized cipher to away onaaespeare s reputation, - yyenote that DonneUy talks of the nlavs eonuini f.f-, i.ea t of , v, 7.-r--rz'r :.:rw""r'"r'a: tnat are ULUacon's works.-Wbat of it.. - Could not a lawyer who attend eaconsianuj upon ineineaire eaten dramas, v-'llie ; probability is Is aeon. borrowed the idea and words of the immortatdwmatista: Bacbnr ; was seven "years the j junior j of - Shake-. speare.; ;:.. ji-ti c- 5 POLITIC ALUIllIB W The Northern lpubhcan papers often amuse" their readers by opeh- ing up t the 'suppressed negro Vote.. The replies have0 been abundant- and conclusive. But the8es very papers take good care hot to.'aay anything of the "suppressed - vote" f white men in the North. There is no greater. abuse m our election than the posi? xenna,uau.v-8aia ,o vps unia Senate: ' . , . "Sixteen thousand black attd ; white Re- publican vors4n.nsylvanJa-are suffl cient to elect a Congressman, but it requires r i r - TT-!4.a i 4l,uuu or their opponents to do so. ", . ; That is, the Republicans . have so gerrymandered and manipulated the elections that it took nearly three times as many Democratic voters to elect a member of the U. S. House as it did Republicans .to elect a member. But this is not the only abuse. In Indiana the same condition of affairs exists or existed to Borne extent. In 1876, in the six Middle States the vote stood: Republican, 1,842,212, and the Democratic vote 1,804,341. Now fairness and honesty would have given the Democrats nearly as I many members of the Congress as the Republicans had. But such was not the case. The Republicans se cured 75 members and the Demo- crats but 46. That is, the Republi- I cana had a majority in six States of 37,871 votes, and because of this they captured 29 members. In Indiana in 1876, the Democrats had an actual plurality of 5,000 votes. But the ounmng and greedy and unscrupu lous Republicans had so gerryman dered the State as to get nine mem bern, while their opponents got but four. In Pennsylvania they got two-thirds of the delegation with a majority against them of 110,000 votes.- If this is not a suppression of white voters of Democratic voters what is it? The alleged frauds in the Balti more election are to be very closely inquired into. It is a singular fact tnat Wlth a certain class of Indepen- dent Republican and supposed Dem ocratic papers in the North a bolt in a party is always taken as an in fallible indication that "something is rotten in Denmark," and that the bolters are really actuated by tbe high motive of trying to secure an honest election and reform in the party. It has come to pass that only bolters are prompted in their zeal by pure intentions and noble aspirations, whereas the bulk of the party that stand firm are put down as favoring fraud and dishonest methods. We say this is remarkable. Bat it is ridiculous and for. tha most part false. Kickers are generally self seekers and would-be-dictators. We again apologize to the Wades boro Messenger for the appearance of matter taken from it and wrongly credited to the Intelligencer. The error is not ours. We have tried to keep the credits right, but the errors of the composing room sometimes escape our eyes. CURRENT COM M EX T. The Southern tnj.n who fails to respect Mr. Davis for his high character and devotion to the South to honor him ' for the services he rendered, the sacrifice he made and the sufferings heroically borne in be half of the rights of our people would never be a martyr for any cause, and would be devoid qf those generous emotions - which fina lodg ment in every breast and expression from every heart which pulsates with I love of country and admiration for the heroic deeds that; men' do for the cause: of home and country, - No motives of mistaken policy should betray the Soathern . people- from re specting and honoring , Mr. Dans upon all proper occasions. Standing upon the border-land between time and eternity let his spirit be exalted, L. Sa'i.lji a - '.a-". .. a." 'a-. - wuen is tajtetj- mgntto tne uod'. I that mad Htwittt; the txatiiOt's con iBXioa immtt are not I unmindful- of:; bii eeryices. and that TriSTOf1?- fnlrnAuta Chroti -One of Mr.Henryr James pert -male characters In pettlooats, brant as Tassa's, with something bet suppM6d ;De-4" sbn-o ter ; than; Byron's wickedness "and -DOBton, is maaerecenuy to oDserye: ' AKT xraa--a-aa' - 9nAt, .. OI.V XXT -Ta.- Scott, ..you.;: mean; . he.: who wrote 'Ivanhoe,' and all that. 'Who wastes his tinie overi tb6k;f all of incidents strung:-wjjeeriby dearj doesa anybody nctatz any body: reaa tnose aeaiy-oitf-areamy books aow-a-days?" .Mr. James, obvious lyi does nofct'Doubtless, he caa hot. ue e bnly .reads MrHowellsf a for wuw nvtri:iioweus only l f.ae.--isiMror a.feather .Jw;'sv--iMr-or a.feather over V Words worthV poetry to dar. ?htnd ,yet, nnrslrrwerreaUy Ldoubtitfhis ' bmty place and:! t think bo meanly of the age, aa; to -lei label it-rightly- " - . TI ' -,- -" - . - " V"-:. '.'w .-V ;. . : 1 PWHatnVand' : vnt ;mmrir JMfl11w t think bo meanlvoflh .W V- AAtmrnA thata if Sanother Scott weYe to . arise,-: he would get - no hearing? XouisviUe Courier- Journal J 73 UPREM ECO VRTpECISlOSS Rleij?h Newsierier;x' Bevans vs. Goodrich: -l r ; :V -Where, in a bill of foreclosure, a judgment has been obtained and an ofder made to Jay off the homestead . jot the : defendant, provisionally, there being an intervening jadgmenV creditor, a party -plaintiff, and -vibe comm.RHinner tJ lav :6ff'tbe hdme-f etead aot andrmake beir report, and defendant asks: for, an Allotment of I seven .additional acres, wnion-; is as- seated to by the plaintiffs and an, or- der is made to that' effect giving ?o defendant" the privilege to select .the aaia additional acres ana, uu u nre. directiaff the commissioners to do :, - HeldjThat any objection defend- ant may have bad to-the order was waived by his failure to perfect " bis appeal. and abandoning .ft, after be fFFc j fllODen BCiea WtlDUUb uiuj. ' . . . ai iL .a X. Z - bad annealed from said order. Held: That the order went to the merits ot the matter, and was not a mere interlocutory ruling, but was the subject of an immediate appeal. " : ; Held: That an . Omission to state the date of the allotment of which defendant had . knowledge, . being urred to attend, worked no injury. Held: That questions of fact that arise in the progress of the allotment are not such issues of fact ss eDtitle the parties to a jury trial. Held: That although either party could have had the value of. the pro perty assessed by a jury, yet when au allotment has been made and tbe defendant asks for a specified addi- tion which is agreed to by the other parties. and tne Court so orders, there is no longer a question of value for the jury to assess. Held: That questions of costs mast await the sale and final jadg- ment where the application of the fund depends on the amount realized. Grimes vs. .Elizabeth Taf t. In the partition of John .Boyd's land among his heirs in 1859 the shares alloted to four of them were charged with the payment, of $1,237 to Elizabeth Taft, an heir, for equal lty. Henry, one of those whose shares were so charged, dying, his estate descended to Elizabeth and others. In 1879 his adntlnistrator filed his petition against Elizabeth and others to sell Henry's land to make assets and the land being duly sold plaintiff bought and received the deed. In 1885 Elizabeth Issued exe cution on the judgment of 1879 and directed the sheriff to sell the land allotted to Henry and which in 1879 had been purchased by plaintiff, and thereupon plaintiff applied for an in junction. Held: That the share of Henry de scended to hia heirs subject to the charge made on it in 185 aiJ that Elizabeth was entitled to have the proceeds of the sale made in 1879 applied in the due course of admin istration to the discharge of her lien. Held: That she being a party to the proceeding to sell tbe land can not question the title of the pur chaser. England vs. Gardner, 90 N. C. 199 p., and Shields vs. Allen, 77 N. C. 375 p. Approved. And that' the purchaser holding under the deed made in pursuance of the judgment of the court in that case, holds the land discharged of the lien, and is entitled to .the injunction sought. Supreme Court. Raleigh News-Observer. Court met yesterday morning at 11 o'clock. Appeals from the Fifth District were disposed of as follows: Rogers vs. Jenkins, from Durham; argued by Messrs. Strndwick fc Boone and Batchelor & Devereux for plaintiff, and Messrs. John . Manning and Graham & Raffia for defendant. Scoggins vs. Turner,-from Dur ham; argued by Messrs. Manning fc Manning for plaintiff, and Messrs. Graham & Raffia and R. C. Strnd wick for defendant. PaarHtyn! Plstea tor X-lterattare.- Mauxice Thompson to American Magazine. The question is forever an open one: What is poetry, and what is not poetry ? Surely there is a wide space for difference of " opinion so long as ..we. have Mr. Whitman at one extreme and the dialect singers at tbe other. Perhaps it is all good' in a degree. Such a poet as Hayne sets himself too high for the popular taste and yet not high enough to be accounted one of the great. He was obe of the true and- tbe , good, how ever, a man ; who uttered . nothing base, who lived and sang: and died in the ecstaoy of high endeavor. When we compare what Hayne. has done with what has been the lif e-work of other men who are called great, we wonder if be is not greater than they. Take Poushkin . and Byron and Lamartine and Taisso -not the- greatest, bat accounted" great poets now as formerly and Hayne's light is purer and worthier than any one of them can-show- It is a wholesome light, . with io oolored I ; i, forbidden :heat of ' Poushlrin'a and Byron's, and yet it is as , tender as Lamartine'a and . as rhythmically vi- I poushkin's 'sensaality to give it Vigor. Greatness is a mere word at times, and it is "well enooeh to make comparisons. "Take "out of ! Byron's gucry an mo immorauty ana ail me ombast, and what you will have left will scarcely Jaawxirtli keepintr ae the fu -f- .Tft P0etrv it ttfV the critic of the-future .wilLfiod irtu all Mr aa. at least something' ta make him pause and s wonder, i as" the-critlo-wonders over v Words worthV Doetnr to d air. I i.i.iJM,:.-.:. vm.-.. -v " V?". ..-J'fVUl (V l H.KI ! f I . . Wil l Ml N OTO-N'M A It K-KT ..;;--;;-V i-'-f . "J" :'-,'-'V' ySTAJ OFFICE. Oct. 29, 6 P. M ' SPmrrS TTJRPENTINEThe market opened flrin at 35 cents "per gallon, wlih sales oi rectipta at quoiawuos. r v . . . KOSIN Market firm at 80 cts per bbl .for. Strained, nd ;85j cents for Good ' Strained.' .s;. s -.,-?" ... - i : T Alt Market quoted firm at $1 - 20 per bbl of 280 lbs-, with Balea' of irecelpU at quotations. .. - . -, . - . r CRUDE TUBPENTINE-DintUleri quote i 5 for Virgin and Yellow. Dip and j qo for Hard. ...,.: 1. - COTTON llarkei ' quoted ' qukt at 0 816 jg". Middling, without eales. L&ter. gales of 200 balea reported at 9J CU. nnna,lnn. TAnrji Ex chance were as follows : Ordinary...... .8 8-16 cuptt) Good Ordinary.-.,.... 8 'i " liow Middling... .... 8 13-10. " " Middling 8-16 " GoodTCddliiui .9- " CORN Quoted firm at 60 cents f or yel low ia bulk, and 62 cents In sacks; while is quoted at 62 cents id bulk, and 61 cents in sacks for cargoes. - TIMBER Market steady, with quota tions as follows: Prime and Extra Ship ping, first-class heart, $8 00&10 00 per M. feet; Extra $6 0007.60; Good Common Mill, $3 00Q5 60; Inferior to Ordinary, 3 O0Q4 00. - PEANUTS Market firm. Prime 6560 cents; Extra Prime 75Q80 cents; Fancy 90 cents per bushel of 23 lha. RICE. Market quiet. Fair quoted at 4&4c; Prime 55fc per pound. Rough 7080c for upland; 85c3$l 05 for tide water per busheL HECEIITS. Cotton Spirits Turpentine..... Rosin Tar Crude Turpentine- 1,2U bales 124 casks 805 bbls 41 bbls 18 bbls DoraKsric niAiiiCBTa Br Tslasraoh to tbe Xornlmc Star.l Financial Maw York. Oct. 29. Noon. Money easy at 34 per cent. Sterling exchange 481! 422 and 485i485. State bonds dull but steady. Government securities dull but firm. Naw You. Oct. 29. Evening Sterling exchange dull but steady. Money easy at 84 per cent., closing offered at 4 per cnt. Government securities dull but firm ; four per cents 126f; three per cents 1081. State bonds doll but steady; North Caro lina sizes 121: fours 96. CommeeriaL New Your, Oct. 29. Noon. Cotton dull and easy, with sales of 188 bales; middling uplands 9ents; middling Or leans 9f cents; futures opened steady and closed steady, with tale at the following quotations: November 9. 57 9. 58c i Decern ber 9.549.55c; January 9.59; February 959c; March 9.66c; April 9.749.78c. Flour quiet and firm. Wheat quiet and irregular. Corn easier. Pork steady at (14 00&14 so. Lard nrm at ao vO. Spi rits turpentine firm at 86c Rosin firm at tl 17tQl 25. Old mess pork $13 50 18 75. Freight steady. Nkw Yobx, Oct. 29. Evening. Cotton dull but easy; sales of 188 bales; mid dling uplands 9c; middling Orleans 9c; net receipt at all ports 40.801 bales; ex- Krts to Great Britain 7.203 bales, to ance 5,611 bales, to the continent 11,712 bales; stock at ail U. & porta 628,835 bales. Southern flour quiet and steadily held. Wheat options leas active and very irreg ular; October and November ic higher and later months iic lower, closing steady; spot a shade lower and dull; No. 2 red October 83f83 11-lCc; November 83, 831c; December 84 716S4tc Corn cash leas active and steady; options ilo lower and only moderately active; No. 2 October 521c; November 6252Jc Oats a shade lower and less active; No. 2 October S3fc; November 83fc: mixed western 82i32lc. Hops steady. CoHee fair Bio spot dull at $18 62; option stronger and fairly active: No.7 Rio October $16 75; November $16 60 16 65; December $16 4016 65. Sugar firm and quiet; fair refining 5 l-16c; re fined quiet. Molasses quiet and unchanged. Rice steady. Cottonseed oil crude 85c; re fined 43c Rosin quiet at $1 17il 25. BpirlU turpentine steady at 88c Bides quiet and steady. Wool Quiet and barely steady. Pork dull and more or less nominal; old men quoted at $18 60 r new mess $14 ' 00 14 60. Beef dull; beef hams steady; tierced beef dull; city extra India meas $14 0015. Cut meats steady; middles dull and nominal. .Lard 45 points lower, dull and heavy; western steam $6 90; Novem ber $8 646 67; December 6 576 61; city steam $9 75; refined $7 00. Freights steady. ; . . . Cotton Net receipts 183 bales; cross re ceipts 16,831 bales; futures closed steady, with sales of. 46,400 bales at the' follow log quotations: November 9. 589.59c; De cember 9.559.56o; January 9.69c; Febru ary 9.669.67c; March 9.739.74c; April 9.819.83c; May 9.899.90c; June 9.96 9.97c Green & Co.. In their cotton circular, say: There has been a small and not particularly important market for cotton options, with practically no change In values, the closing figures standing 1 2 points under last even ing and steady. Very few orders came In from any quarter and business was almost Wholly confined to selling up for the end or the week on local deals, with an easier tone front Liverpool neutralized by a some what lighter movement at the South. Chicago, Oct. 29. Cash quotations were as follows: Flour steady. Wheat No. 2 spriog 71i711; No. 8 spring 64c; No. 2 red 72,o. Corn No 2, 41$c OaU No. 2, 25Jc Mesa pork $13 00. Lard, per 100 lbs, $6 45. Short rib sides (loose) , $6 50; dry salted shoulders (boxed) $5 005 20; snort clear aides (ooxeai fa uuo 90. Whis key $110. The leading' futures ranged aa follows opening, highest and closing: Wheat No. 2 October 72,-72, 71 1 ; November 72. 72f. 711: Corn No. 2 October and November 41f, 411. 4H. -Oats No.2 October , 25, 25; November 25f , 254. 25. Mees pork January $12 62. $12 65. $13 42v. Lard October $6 40, $6 40, $640; November $6 80, $6 80, $0 271. Short ribs October $6 60. $6 50. 13 40; January $6 871. t 40,' $6 80.. r . ;. ;. . -.t'l .. - St. - Loots,-Oct. 29. Flour quiet and steady. Wheat opened io lower, declined e more, closing at the lowest rates; No.2 red. cash - 71172cj October , Tll71te. Corn lower; cash 8SiS94e: October 8921 8lc. Oat firm; caah 25.25lc: October I 24,cl WhUkey steady at tl 05. ProvUionr -.--. ...... ; ,... B-4i.TricOa5aar Oct,:29. Flour qulit and "tcadJ t caircntpricea, Wheat southern m&SOic Corn, southern quiet and steady ; new white and yellow 45Q48c: western S a. 4B - J B1 I (?QU DUl steaay. I CiKCiaTtx' Wheat n, October za. Floor steadr. S01 g. . qoiet; Ko.c.2 red 73rC Cora linn; No. 3 mixed 441o- Oata tmtev - 28ic Proviaion la light demand. WLli- : Ho. Ji mixed steady attl 05;- Hogs flxm..v. CHatBXKSTOir, Oct. 19. Spirits turpen tine firm at Z2c Roa!n .firm; good strained & .-' . 'V ' - ' ai.vaaniaH; Oct 2i.-3pirii tutpen Un firm at 83c ; Rosia firm at DOcQJl 10. .a -. v : ,- - mwi m f fj 'I- i-'.S-".' --a, . . sr cahle to Vtm Uurainx bu.t UrkBToou Oct. 29, 13.80 P. IL CoUon dull, with prices generally Jo bo; era' f or; tnlddl.DK uplands 5 516d; tnAAg Orleans S 7-1 6dj sales today of 8.000 bales; lor speculation ana. export 10,000 bales; receipts 12,000 bales, of -frlich 8,000 were American. . ' Futures duJUtt a decline; up lands. in c, OctoTyr delivery 5 16-64d. also S lS-64d; October and November de livery 5 lS-tUd; November, and December delivery 5 10-4d; Dember and - January delivery 5 10-64d; January and February delivery S 10 64d: February and March de-J livery o ll-64dt March and April delivery 5 ;13 64d ; April and May delivery 6 14-64d ; May and June delivery 5 16-64d - Wheat firm: demanafalrr . holders Offer sparingly. Corn quiet, steady and la fair demand. Beef, extra Iadla mess 66s 8d.' Pork, prime mess 72s 6d. Lard, prime western 84s. a .;-- Lavsaroou Oct. M. JI..M. Cotton. middling uplands One) Oetobsr delivery o 10-040, ouver; uctooer sn)aCiovecai delivery S 13-640. seller: Noycmber a December delivery 5 ftrad. buyer: Decem ber and January delivery S 10-643, seller; January and February . delivery 5 1164a. bajer; February , and "March delivery S ll-64d. seller; March and April delivery 5 13- C4d, seller; April and May delivery, 5 14- 64d. buyer; May and Jane delivery 5 16-64d. barer. Futures clos&X dull. Sales of cotton to-day Included 5,900 bales American. As a horse and cattle lotion. Salvation' Oil b&i proven itself an infallible remedy, it has received the hearty indorsements of many old and well-known horsemen. Price 25 cents a bottle. f MARINE. Part Alasaaae Oec SO. Sun lUaes 6.21 A M Sun Set : 5.06 P M Day's Length. 10b 45 m High Water at SmithviUe 619 AM High Water at Wilmington.... 8.09 AM ARRIVED. Steam yacht Louise, Snell, South port, master. Stmr A P Hurt, Robeson, Fayettevillc, Woody & Carrie Schr Hattie Turner, 295 tons, Gillmour, Perth Amboy, E G Barker & Co. with rail road iron to C C R R. Schr Martinique, 187 tons, Lowell, Perth Amboy, E G Barker & Co, with railroad iron toCORH CLEARED. Steam yacht- Louise. Snell, Soutbport, master. Steamer Gulf Stream, Pennington, New York. H G Small bones, Stmr A P Hurt, Robeson, Fayettevflle, Woody & Cuirie. Br steamship Coventry, Bacon, Bremen, Alex Sprunt & Son. Br steamship Parkland, Smith, Liver pool, Williams & Murchiaen. sxroBTi. COASTWISE. Nkw Yobx Steamship Gulf Stream 835 bales cotton, 439 casks spta turpt. 70 bbls rosin, 231 do tar, 180 do crude, 116 do Eitch, 74 do liffhtwood, 29 do bulks. 32 ags peanut. 69 pkgs mdse, 110.000 shin gles, feet lumber. FOREIGN. Brxkxx Br steamship Coventry 5,025 bales cotton. LaiVKurooL Br steamship Parkland 4,908 bales cotton. glAIIOfE DIRECTORY. List mt tm U rrt r rilalssr- FT. C, Oct. SO, 188T. tTkk Hit does sot ambrao vb als aader 09 tousf STEAMSHIPS. Dayleaford (Br.) 901 tons, Bindair. O P Mebane. Allie (Br.). 1,134 tons, Rodgaard. O P Mebane. Beech villa (Br.), 1,120 ton, WaUon, Hekle & Co. BARQUES. Frnen (Nor.). 872 tons, Peterson, Paleraoe, Downing & Co. -Marie Kcyper (Ger.), 862 ton, Scemann, E Peachaa Ss Westermann. PilUu (Ger.) 470 tons, Gealach. E Peach au & Westermann.; Theodore Yoss (Ger.), 817 tons, Scrmann, E Peachau s Westermann . PonsElii (Br.). Paknoham, Heide&Oo. M D Rocker (Ger.), 897 none. Rehberg, Paterson, Downing & Co. Wllhelm Max (Ger.), 436 tons, 'Fretwurst, Ilelde & Co. Monica (Nor.), 637 tons, Johanncsen, Helde & Co. Adolph (Ger.), 523 tons, Westendorf. Helde & Co. BRIGS Taritta(Nor.X 294 tons, Knudsen, Hcide & Co. SCHOONERS. Gen A H Ames, 453 tons, Johnson. Geo Harris A Co. Edith R Seward, 233 tons, Travis, Geo Harriss&Co. Mary A Powers, 473 tons, Keen, E G Bar ker & Co. Annie Alnsley. 288 tons, McAndrews, Geo Harri &. Co. Georgia Clark. 847 tons, Bartlett, Geo Har ris & Co. James Ponder, 253 tons. Lynch, Geo Har j rissauo. Lamoine, 246 tons, Parker, E G Barker & Co. R 8 Graham, 825 tons, Avis. George Har ri & Co. Fanny Tracer. 232 tons. Til ton. George Harries & Co. Roger Moore, 818 tons, GUkey, E G Bar ker Ss Co. Jennie Hall, 891 tons, Hall, Geo. Harrisa St Co. BROWNS IRON BITTERS WILL CURE. HEADACHE INDIGESTION BILIOUSNESS DYSPEPSIA NERVOUS PROSTRATION MALARIA CHILIS and FEVERS TIRED FEELING GENERAL DEBILITY PAIN in the BACK akdSIDES IMPUREBLOOD : CONSTIPATION FEMALE INFIRMITIES " RHEUMATISM . . . NEURALGIA kidney and liver . ; -' troubles . ; : : ' FOR SAZJ?BY ALZ.: DRUG GISTS holerdM orbus olie larrhoe urnmer Complaints YSentery Cured bya tea&pooTifui of Penyj)avi$L?m cr? in a little Afiifar Sugar and Water AU-Qrucgists 5cu.it. m sep SS DaWlm re It tv ICE. ICE. ICE. JH VIEW OF THE FACT Til i7 Zl enlarin our plaoU and it..:: fc0cn Ut ti capmctty to ftmUlt FIFTT TO' op ;c dult we kavo decided to rcisce ib pi let to ju Cgnre we oritnallir Intended t::nc v.. On and after to day we wti; fcmiisb k t, aeu,. ered tw1o a dr. at folloW.cjr r.if IO to SO pounds, ecb de '-nrr, c-m poand. 1 00 ponndf, each dcliTcrr. 4'J ctcu jkjt.oc pooods. Lanre quantltlet at lower rtu-. We trust that the above rr!ic w!U Ue ttelc torr to tbe ooicmniiHy Wm. E. Worth & Cp. aep 1 tf th tn N. H. SMITH, REAL ESTATE AGENT. FAYETTEVILLC X. C. Ooireapondeoce ollc.ted from puTtio mtAt buy 'or sell Itnn H;U.bie lAiarin r em ployed to tnveeUjrate titlea, rte Kt ft-r- u li ineas men of FayettertUe, office at fsyiiTir ncroT, Comer id on ford tod Donaldson F' Wbere a FULL STOCK of BEST ICE, COAE AND WOO ft Can be foaad at LOWEST PFJCESv. S7Looa)ot for tbe nra. Ao. 'Ice. CotO. Wood," ; lSDiwtf ATonCat-naviKo. OTS THE 7TH DiT 0T A" October. A. D. 187. qoalitwl before in Clerk of tbe aopenor Conrv oi ew tixaonr M XxecoUlx with tbe will avoDexol on tbe anal oC C. U Oralllla. deoeed. o ttc bwl7 Clrea to all penwas Indebted to m.14 6e(6aiU) maxe Immediate paymeBt. aod all iroM ut tac clalars acalnst aald estate will jirtmA tneo for payment en or before tbe Hit dy o! oc, D. UK&. cr UiU uotioe wlIJ be pit-nd m bwoftbelr reoovery. Dated October Stb. 1W7. MA.ET.K. GRAFPXJN. Ertxntri OCtBoawOw KFtate C. U GmT-tt. Executor's Notice. TA.VnCQ QUALIFI ED AS 1 1 BCTT0E UXDIB UkalaatwCl and testament of Georre T ' Eg bert, d-Kseaaed, aU persont todebtd to aW" oadeat are notified to make immediate I;ro and all pereoni barlnc clalmt ars-lnet aa.d will preeeot them for p.yrojBt aa or bJore U Mtbdayof September. 1SK8. or notice viu be placed In bar of tbelr recorery. SHORT CUT! -rXTB HAVE THI "6HOET CUT" AT MAIT0S. A abort cnt on froeU. A abort cut on qakj Silliportatlon Worm. A abort cot on rich oli r0T7areAbUab4 fact. We t. 1 1. , s Telooments are near at band. Boy a rrm v stir tbe soU. -Oo tm tbe troond." aald God to man, abdue tbe eartb. It aball be tbloe Only a few years benoe and land w Tl,wl!retnpfebep at body who. BU;,u----g BLOCK KB, alona. oolttf Beal Estate Arent- Mtiton. THE CLIMATE, THE SOIL JjXR TBTJCK O AjU)X!ttJSQ.A2TD EAFIDTW att Kortbu, cannot be snrpaaaed In any wctW Honk Carolina as we find It at ly twe Kokiutm rardena tnSprtnc. A few rood Farmj JJ sale, but tZm m.A nnatman hare D eBTlapje . tnnitr . " - - - m : . TJ V ' j k now. oct 1 tf Beal 14 mm A Farm to Bent, Oil KrLX3 FROM XT0N. J1CZ?M. O from Ftoral CoUee repo. 0 fE5X. Good tmUdlnaa. Tea rooms tred. Would leaM for a term ofyearf U o . - ka. kvuim nr oottOO w 5 g BICa an aT" oct IS U Beal Estate AewnU HmxuvJ PARIS 1KB LAUDS FOR SILL ad all adjaoeat ectiCeT fine tlaaal f nr Inl I limlll ware rtorvn ob - klat ur tans anetirpa-ed n any obT. u ptbtforfregrbtj. Ball ways ud West. ialok t???. Trve atkeiita. and a better one for practical i aro . Oome and eee or wrtte to . tnri!1K. BaVtaaeAi l rent, 'rr ' - BTaBDAwlx Roboaoa jo 7, tTT AirTXI IaAJ3IE3 TO WOBK 0N 0t TmacT Ooodaor tke HoBdaye and rtd' fiot avzCUcton. Fall.perUcaiart free I ' "larOTKawCTACTrBTO TAKE. NO OTHER.