- . ' r 2- - c- .- -!ut:lier' Annajnccincfii. 1 Hi MORNING STAB, the oldest dally aews- Paper la North C&rollna,ia published dally .except Monday, at J8 00 per year, $3 00 for six months, tl 5 1 tor three months; 60 ots (or one montb, to mall subscribers. Delivered tto city snbsortbers at the rate of is eeots per week for any period from one week to one year. Taa-WKKKLY STAB ta pnbll&hed erery Friday morning at $1 09 per year, 00 eta. for six months, SOets for three months. TAD VKRTIsrrra 'rates mATT.YV One sauare pne day, $1 00 ; two days, $1 75 ; three days, 2 50; m i tour days, $8 00: fiye days, $3 80; one week, $400; weea, one month, it.hs. S4 00 : now; two montns, 91700; three montna, jw ; six months, $40 00 ; twelve months, $00 00. Tea lines of solid Nonpareil type make one square. ,-: ---All' announcements of Fairs, Festivals, Balls - Hops, Plo-Nics, Society Meetings, Politioal Meet ., - - I na, Ac., will be oaarged refrular advertising rate , J1 1 "i Notion muter hearf Af "n fc itMma" SO eents per line for first insertion, and 15 oents per line for each subsequent Insertion. x' r . , ' No adrertisements Inserted In Local Column at x , any prioe. - "t Advertisements Inserted once a week in Dally ' , . will bo charged $100per8qnareforeaohln8ertloD. , Kvery other day, three fourths of dally rate, 4 Twice a week, two thirds of dally rate, y - - " 5 r. Communication unless they oontain lmpoi , tant news, or dtoouss briefly and properly subjeoti of re interest, are not wanted: and, If accept t able in every other way, they will invariably be rejoccea ii uwnunsmsoiuisaauioiuiniuuuuua An'extra oharge will be made for double-column or triple-column advertisements. Eoticos of Marriage or Death. Tribute of Re enect. Resolutions of Thanks, Ac are charged for aa ordinary advertisements, but only half rates when paid for strictly In advance. At this rate 50 cents will pay for a simple , announcement of Marriage or Death. Advertisements on which no specified number of insertions is marked will be continued "till for bid," at the option of the publisher, and charged np to the date of discontinuance. Amusement, Auction and Offloial advertisements one dollar per square for each insertion. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to oooapy any special place, will be charged extra according to the position desired Advertisements kept under the head of "New advertisements" will be charged fifty per cent, extra. Advertisements discontinued before the time contracted for has expired, charged transient rates for time actually published. Payments for transient advertisements must be made in advance. Known parties, or strangers wtth proper reference, may pay monthly or quar terly, according to oontract. All announcements and recommendations of candidates for office,, whether in the shape of communications or otherwise, will be charged as advertisements. Contract advertisers will not be allowed to ex ceed their space or advertise any thing foreign to their regular business without extra oharge at transient rates Remittances must be made by Check, Draft. Postal Money Order, Express, or in Registered Letter. Only such remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. , Advertisers should always specify the Issue or Issues they desire to advertise in. Where no is sue is named the advertisement will be Inserted I n the Dally. Where an advertiser oontraota f of t he paper to be sent to him during the time hit advertisement is in, the proprietor will -only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his ad dress. The Morning Star. Ry IIil,IAI!IU. BKRNARD. WILMINGTON, N. G. Wednesday Morning, July 20, '87 EDWARD GK All A 51 HAYWOOD. Since George E. Badger and Judge Pearson died it is very doubtful if North Carolina has had as able, as thoroughly furnished, as scientific a lawyer as Col. Edward Graham Hay- wood whose death was announced in vesterdav's Stab. He died sndden- lv Mondav mo-ht in Raleigh where - j a o . he was born, and where he had re sided all of his life. He was prob ably in his 57th year. He was the son of the late Senator William H. Haywood, who was considered the best equity lawyer of his time. Col. Haywood was prepared for college by the late J. M. Lovejoy, of revered memory, and educated at an Episcopal College in Maryland, if we are not mistaken. He and the writer of this were class mates at Lovejoy's. The late David M. Carter, Gen. Junius Daniel, Louis E. Henry, a very bright and promis ing youth, and a half dozen others, .were of the class. As far as known to us, this writer alone survives. Mr. Lovejoy said to us more than once that it was the best class the most intellectual he ever taught. Of the class Haywood was the finest in intel lect unless Carter was abler. We ra ther think Carter had the most logical mind as he had the greatest talents for the acquisition of languages. He was the ablest man in our class at the University and there were some I eixtv-four members. I Ed Graham, as the boys called him. was an nnnsnall v handnm I J j I and dressed with a fastidious neat- I ness and costliness of attire that I 7 none rivalled. He was unusually precocious and gave decided prom ise of his subsequent distinc tion. He delivered an address at , one of the Lovejoy commence V ments that was so good that the 1 boys, with the boys' injustice and ' ,envy, said either his father wrote it ( ,'OT his friend Col. D. K. McRae. r v uave uut inue aouot mat it was vwu no.a lur ue was intellectual- jr wreuimy cieyer, as we Have said. xi 3 ... AAuirrieu miss mag nenry, a mat IahaI JJ 1 i'r x u,wou jruu oeauuim woman, ' and a daughter of the late Hon. - Louis D. Henry. She was sister of Louis E. mentioned above. Mrs. , Haywood was one of the most charm ing and superb women we have ever known or seen. She died a few years ago. .JBv her Col. H. had several sons an, daughters. ,J Col.; Haywood in early life was a member of the Legislature. His seat r-wasonce contested and he made a I popular favor, fakes place, that lead speech, in behalf of himself. He was Ting papers papers of the most cha- then : some f twenty-eight years pld. Judge Badger heard it and said it - " was the ablest effort of the mind for , a man of , his .age to which, he-had listened. He was a Presidential Elector in 1860, and canvassed - ex-, tensively-' " His speeches -were; not i -i popular tTht s to say, he did'notr indulge in anecdote or illustration. His speeches were philosophical elevated, ' ; eloquent and states manlike. :They.were too purely ab struse and intellectual and subtile for the universal mind to grasp. : Bat as manifestations of ability they were the finest speeches delivered in the State in the memorable year of many Presidential tickets and impending war. Mr. Badger and Mr. Henry W. Miller were both Electors on other tickets. Haywood's speeches were the most thoughtful and attractive to the cultivated. Mr. Badger's forte was not the Btump. He was forty-five years old before he made a political speech. It was delivered in the Court House at Oxford in 1844. He said that was his first ap pearance as a political speaker. The Senate and the bar were his proper arenas. There he was unapproached by any man North Carolina ever had at the bar or ever sent to the Senate. Mr. Gaston might rival him in some particulars, but in eloquence, in the most exquisite English, in the most luminous and perspicacious thinking, in clearness of statement, in lucidity of arrangement, in readiness of retort, in powers of memory, in wit, in humor, in sarcasm, in dramatic description, in superb acting he has never been equalled by any North Carolinian. Mr. Benton, so long in the U. S. Senate, from Missouri, was a very able man, al most of the first rank. He was able to hold his own in debate when the great debaters and orators and phil osophical statesmen of the country were in that august body. But we have been betrayed into an unanticipated parenthesis. Col. Haywood, like Mr. Badger, was at his greatest at the bar. He was es sentially a lawyer, although he was a man of excellent reading in some other departments and was familiar with some of the masters in literature. Those who were best qualified to estimate his legal acquisition and powers had the highest opinion of him. He probably received larger fees than any lawyer ever identified with the North Carolina bar. He was strictly a scientific lawyer and nia range oi siuaies was wiae ana accurate. The only lawyer left who can fairly be 8aid to be 80 scientific and learned is Marcellus V. Lanier, Esq., of Oxford, of whom Chief Jus tice Pearson remarked about 1875, that if there was any more learned lawyer in North Carolina than he was thatr he did not appear before the Supreme Court. Mr. Lanier is not only learned at law but be is fa miliar with five or six languages, can read German as English and reads his Greek Testament every day and possibly his Hebrew Old Testament. Col. Haywood was a man of large frame and grew stout with age. He was some five feet ten or eleven inches high, and had a big brain in a big head. He had a system of mnemotechny of his own, and once thought of publishing it. He could recall any date at will. He published some of his more elaborate argu ments. The la9t production we read from him was his excellent and original address upon the Life and Character of the late Bartholomew F. Moore another great North Carolina lawyer- We believe that Col. Hay wood's la8t appearance as a public speaker was at Wilson some few vears aS on a Tenth of May celebra "on " we are not mistaken. He was , . , . . a man OI 8UPenor aDinties, ana nede serve8 t0 be numbered among the Sreat lawyers of our State. Heeerved in ine Jomeaerate army as lieut. Colonel. OPPOSITION TO BLAINE. Mr. Blaine's popularity with his party is giving great distress to those editors and politicians in the- Republican party who prefer anoth er man. We can not say. a better man. for these verv edit and U ticians are o-enerall- w?1T.n to I John Sh Blaine, and lead mnverl hv cnt on I I ' patriotic sentiments and flin I D The recent indications so to make plain that Sherman . is less popnlar than Blame. It is manifest that even in the North-west the Maine politician . has a greater influ ence than the Ohio - man ha So unmistakable' is f Blaine's pop ularity with .the" ; Republican rank and file, and so clear are . the indica tions mow that he will be the nominee in 1888!, unless a, turn in the tide of 1 racter and Ability, are trying to stem J the current of his popularity and to I divert it into another channel. The I Philadelphia American, the able I weekly, edited by . Prof. Thompson, I of, the University of Pennsylvania' I has-; an editorial ..hat is,plaintre"in i i-i . be a good thing for the! Democrats if ,1 Blaine is the choice., uns nowwiu, you go about satisfying Mr. Blaine that he is not as strong or.stronger than Sherman or any one else? So much in earnest is the Ameri can in getting rid" of " Blame as a' prospective candidate that it does not hesitate to intimate that Blaino j must be ruled out. Its closing words are not to be misapprehended. ' It says: "Mr. Cleveland is in, and has intrenched himself. His people are learning the pro cesses of administration. : If they have not done well, they have not wrecked the coun try. They defy any attack but the strong est. Is it then seriously proposed to re-' cover the lost ground under the very lead ership that caused the loes? Could any thing be more fatuous? "If Mr Blaine does not call a halt on his following, the Republican party must do so for itself. It has great duties to the country. It is concerned for public mat ters of high moment. It owes nothing to Mr. Blaine. It gave him its best effort, and failed. It must go forward." DNDEmOCRATIC AND BNRKPUB 1,1 CAN. Is a life-tenure in ofiice demO" cratic or ropuplican ? Is it in acoord with the genius of free institutions that a set of men should go into ofiice under examination as to quali fication and then continue in ofiice for twenty, thirty, forty or even fifty years? Is an aristocracy of office-holders a thing to bo desired in a free country? Must a law be enacted that shall deprive tie people of the right to change their own offi cials? Shall the power of selection for ofiice be taken from the people in that government that is of the people and by the people and for the people ? This is precisely what Civil Ser vice does and proposes to do. A travelling Commission to select offi cers is substituted for the will of the people. In fact by the Civil Service law the whole business of regulatiog and selecting officials is for' ever ta ken from the people, and is given to a roving commission. Let it not be forgotten that the system proposed is British is alto gether undemocratic. It destroys the whole underlying principles of a representative Government. Public opinion under our system is the great corrective of abuses and wrongs. But the British life tenure utterly destroys and denies all this. The LoniaviUe Courier Journal states this great principle in a' very few words. It says : fi,' Party is the aent for executing the wil of the people, and office is its vehicle. The divorcement, then, of office and poli tics means the abandonment of representa tive government. That la the whole idea in a nut-shell, and all the clamor about fitness and merit as f parties were not equally interested in ob taining them cannot make out anything of the Mugwump view but a purpose to take the Government further from the peo ple and nearer to the plutocracy, which is seeking to establish an imperial oligarch ism, under the name of a republic, and on the ruins of our admirable system of Na tional and State federation, with its co equal powers, and just limitations resting directly on the consent of the governed that is the public opinion of the people readily ascertained at the polls." The new-fangled British system is utterly and J irretrievably undemo cratic and unrepublican. THE PERIODICALS. The Musical Herald for July has two pieces of choice music and ' 'lots of good reading." Price 10 cents. Musical Herald Co., Boston, Mass. Lippineoit'g Monthly Magazine for Au gust h&s the following contents: A Land ofi Love, a Novel, Sidney Luska; The Homesickness of Ganymede, (a Poem), Edith M. Thomas; The Truth about Ouida, Edgar Fawcett; Latent, (a Poem), Kate Putnam Osgood; Bed, Louise Imogen Guiney; My Unknown Friend, (a Sonnet), Frank D. Stickney ; Life for Life, (a Story), Hjalmar H. Boyesen ; The Sorrow of the Sea, (a Poem), William H. Hayne; 8ocial Life at Yale, Arthur Edmunds Jenks; lie conciled, (a Sonnet), Kate Van nab ; The Keely Motor Secret, C. J. Bloomfleld Moore; Is the Base-Ball Player a Chattel? John Montgomery Ward; Our Monthly Gossip, a complaint anent the Calendars, J. M. ; Book-Talk, Wm S. Walsh. Price 25 cents a number or S3 a vear. J. B. Lippincott Co., Philadelphia. I7i Writer, a monthly magazine for literary workers, is published in Boston, Mass. Number four is out and for Jul v. Priee 10 cents a number or $1 a year. - C URREN T COMOIEN T. The Memphis Appeal may be too strong in its presentation of the odious system, as it ' prevails in Georgia and other Southern States, but there will be great cause for congratulation when the present sys tern is wiped out forever. The Appeal is not far out of the way in its denunciation of this foul .blow upon the civilization of the State. The Chronicle expresses the ' hope that the Legislature will not adionrn until it .makes provision for the abo lition ot the present inhuman system. a.uyusia unronicie. The Republican organs are complainincr beoftnuft the PraaiAan theaxample. of , the .Mayor n uuueu vu, juissouri as oouinernstate,his language -be tone. It is beaded 5Mr. Blame onouiu Call a Halt." 'It appears to argue as if a Democrat would be elected Pre siden t .if Blai ne should be the Repub lican candidatelf this is true ft will you. when, you.verbally presented the invitation - of .. the citizens oi Dt.; Louis that the comine encampment ! of the Grand Army of the Republic would .fctf the1im ,.heia' in- a oouin. ern i State." A.nd "yet ;f or ten years the Republican ofgansnave 'invaria bly lumped Missouri iri apartof the "Solid South" in all their divis- one of the electoral votes and in all their abnae of -the .."rebels."-vw ITork Moenxng Post, At a period when the popu larity of magazine--Uke-Scribuer has been vastly increased.by the pub lication in its paces of certain letters. by Thackeray, Mr.; Ho wells's zeal in ignoring Thackeray who, nice uick- ena and Scott, was not a realist in the Russian manner-.-appears at least curious. Granting, however, that Mr. Howells is right in his opinion that the best fiction is the best real ism, how very tiresome to the aver age novel reader would this world be tf every novel writer agreed witn him and worked on his theory. Clever and interesting ,as Mr. How ells is,- a score of Howellses would oe a surfeit. Variety is the spice of literature, as of life. Give us the author of ?Silas Lapham," but give us Sand, and Balsac. and Hugo, and Scott, and Pickens, and Eliot, and a good deal of .Thackeray, also Who, after . rambliner eently through an instalment of "April Hopes," would not gladly turn to Robert Louis Stevenson and Rider Haggard for wholesome stimulant? It is a good thing that there are so many sorts of men, and so many sorts of books, hereabouts. G. K Montgomery in Boston Post. IF! LMINGTOI STAR. Scotland Neck Democrat. The Wilmington Stab is by all odds the most readable and best got ten op daily in the State, and by far the ablest and soundest on all politi cal and economic questions of the day. When it fails to reach our office, wo feel like our best friend and the friend of the people and of the great party founded by Jefferson was absent. Would to God we had a hundred daily Stars in North Carolina like the daily Star of Wil mington. If we did the indepen dence and liberties of the people would be beyond the reach of the tyrants ceptro and the bed rock prin ciples of the party would ever be the basis of all political and economic measures. Wo don't remember to have ever seen an unsound principle advocated by the Star. It w as true to the principles and doctrines of the party as the needle to the pole. Long may she shine in tbo hearts and around the family altars in the old commonwealth of North Carolina to encourage, stimulate and move to noble deeds, Tlie Loale f Proteetloa. Louisville Courier-Journal. Messrs. Powderly & Co. want for eigners excluded from this couutry. Why not, indeed? Why should not the whole protected interest insist on this as an essential point of the work of protection? Why, indeed, have they not all been Know-Noth- iniH from the beginning to the fiuifch? For, nee you, the exclusion of for-, cign workiugmen from tbo United btatec is precisely the same in its bearing on protected labor as the exclusion of foreign-made goods. From the workingman to his work the step is short, and a barricade against immigration is identically . tne (arne in principle a a nye- tem of prohibition duties on ira ports. They do these things better in France. The proposition has been recently broached and submitted to a legislative commission that all for eigners should be forthwith placed under e special capitation tax of pe cnliarly formidable magnitude. OCR STATE CON TEMPO R ARIES. By his fidelity to his trusts, by his devo tion to his people, by bis honesty, elo auence and good common sense. Senator Vance fills a larger spaco in the affections of our people than any other man in the State.. He is to-day the broadest man in North Carolina. Our people like him be- ciuae there is more or the man about him than there is of the small politician. He speaks what he believes, and that belief is always the result of observation, informa tion and a well balanced mind. Warren ton Gazette. With a Republican high tariff Senate. the Democratic party of the last Congress was defeated in , every movement towards Tariff reform- In the extra session of Congress, probably to be called early in the autumn, our party will introduce a ta rill rerorm Din. ii it is carried, money will b i easier. If it is lost, the blame will rest On the Republican majority in the oeuate, combined wun those pseudo-Uem ocrats. the Randal lite protectionists. If the bill fails the party will then attempt the revenue question. Some relief must come to Ihe oppressed people, and will come if the Democratic party has the power to bring it about . Winston sentinel. But we do care much for the perpetua tion of the principles of the . party and the success of the party, we are cot concern" ed about men. . We don't worship men. We adhere to what we conceive to be prin ciple and not to Cleveland s or any other man's coat tail. We shall be lad when newspaper editors discover we are not try ing to curry favor with them. We shall rejoice when politicians discover we are not running a paper for their benefit. We shall be glad when the . Mugwumps and Republicans ' botn discover we are not try ing satif ring them. . We shall - be happy when all .men everywhere learn that the editor of the Democrat is betrothed to prin ciples not men. We care very little for men only as they are exponents or repre sentatives.- .Men are nere to-day and gone to-morrow, principles remain f oi ever. We are not seeking public favor. We are not seeking 'popularity. ' We are 1 not begging admittances into anytcloae union or fellow ship .with any clique, clan or combination of men. We don, t belong to anybody and no belongs to as; ' We are no' one's guardian and no one is our. guardian, t This la said to be a free country, at all events Cleveland to .acts,, and we have been, taught that the Pre sident of United Suites was but servant of the people and - not freer than 'other men, ' -therefore we. thought vr "had aright to-express outr.thopghtsf provided we. did it at , our own expense, and did not Infringe any one else's tU,h. Scotland Jfeek Democrat: COMMERCIAL." W L M I NOT O N M A R K KT ft r' : V STAR OFFICE, July 19. ft P. 1L, 0PHIIT8 TURPEN?I1E The market opened dull at 80 tsenU per gallon, with sales of 100 casks at 28 cents. ' ROSIH Market steady at 3f ct per bbl for Strained and 871 eta for Good Strained. Fpr.better grades quotations are as follows: erc2$l 00; F $1 00$1 05; O $1 10; Ht)l 15 I 1 EO: K $1 40;M$1 55: N $1 80; W Q $3 10 j WW f 3 30. TAR Market quoted Arm at $1 80 per bbL of 280. lbs.,' . with sales of receipts at quotations. CRUDE TURPENTINE Distillers quote at $3 00 for Virgin, f 1 95 for Yel low Dip and $1 10 for Hard. COTTON--Market quoted nominal on a basis of 10 cents for Middling. No sale. The following are the closing quotations at the Produce Exchange: Ordinary 7 ctsflb GoodOrdinary 9 1-18 " " LowMiddling 9 " " Middling 10 - Good Middling. 10 - TIMBER Market steady, with quota tions as follows: Prime and Extra Ship ping, first class heart, $8 00010 00 per M. feet; Extra Mill, $6 007 50; Good Com mon Mill, $3 005 00; Inferior to Or dinary, $3 004 00. PEANUTS Market firm. Prime 5560 cents; Extra Prime 6570 cents; Fancy 8083 cents per bushel of 23 lbs. KKCHIPTH. Cotton 00 bales Spirits Turpentine S5C cask Rosin 1.140 bbls Tar 71 bbls Crude Turpentine 82 bbls nonKrii tn a it k kt Bt Telegraph to tb Moralmr Star.) Financial. New York. July 19. Noon. Money easy at 44 per cent. Sterling exchange 48210482 and 4840484. State bonds dull but steady. Government securities dull but steady. Naw Youk. July 19. Evening Sterling exchange dull but firm. Honey easy at 4 5 per cent., closing offered at 441c. Government securities dull but firm -.four per cents 127; three per cents 109. State bond steady: xtnrth Carolina sixes 121; fours 96. Commerciai.. Nrw York. July 19 Noon. Cotton nuiflt hut iImHt' with mIm nf 472 h.1Hi at quotations: middling uplands 10 5-16 cents; middling Orleans 10 cents; futures opened steady, with sales at the follow ing quotations: July 10 05c; August 10.10c; Hentemher 9 T2r: Or.Lnher 9J7r- Nnvpm- ber 9.48c; December 9 47c Flour quiet ana steady, wneai Higher. Uorn better. Pork steady at $1C 25O10 75; old mess nork steadv at tl5 25iai5 75. Lard firmer at $7 07. Spirits turpentine steady at 33 cents. tioam steady at XI UZ1 10. Freights firm. Nrw York. Julv 19 Evenlntr ( Vvi inn quiet ; sales 506 bales; middliog uplands 10 5 16 cents; middling Orleans 10 cents; consolidated net receipts 2.817 bales; gross receipts Dales; exports to Ureal liri- tain 8, 135 bales; to France 49 bales; to the continent bales: sales bales; stock in all United States ports bales Southern flour quiet, steady and unchanged. tin . a . tYneai. apoi a snaae stronger out mod -eraiely active; No. 3 red July 82c, closing at 82c: August 82 5-16S2c, closing at 82c. Corn, spot advanced about lc and options Jljc on bad crop reports; No. 2 July 45c: August 4646:, closing at 46c. Oats, spot ic lower; options a trifle better on deliveries after July; No. 2. 3434c; mixed western 84S6c; No. 2. July 331034c, closing at 33 c; August 311c, closing at 33c liopa unchanged and quiet. Coffee, spot fair Rio firm at $20 25; No. 7 Rio not quoted; July $18 55; Au gust $18 701S 85. Sugar quiet and firm. Molasses dull and nominal. Rice steady and in moderate demand. Petroleum crude 5i6c Cotton seed oil quoted at 34 35c for crude; 4244c for refined. Rosin steady at $1 051 10. Spirits turpentine dull at 3232c. Wool firm and mod erately active. Pork quiet but strongly held. Beef quiet and unchanged; middles dull and nominal. Lard opened a couple of points higher, later fell back G3 points, closing heavy. Western steam $7 02; August $6 997 06. Freights to Liver pool steady. Cotton Gross receipts 1,945 bales; fu tures closed steady, with Bales of 81.200 bales at the following quotations: July 10.1810.2Oc; August 10.2S10.24c; Sep tember 9.739.74c; October 9.59c; Novem ber and December 9.519.52c; January 9.559.56c; Februarv 9. 61 9. 62c; March 9.679.68c . Greene & Co.'s report on cotton futures says.- There was a fair amount of anima tion shown without any very, decided fea ture except that the general tone has ruled steadier and the cost ranged higher on all months. The absence of pressure from "long" cotton and some improvement i n tenor of Liverpool advices seemed to bs about the only visible Influences upon which a better feeling was founded, though evi dences of manipulation could be noticed in some cases. Especially did there appear to be an inclination to bid August up. where theain amounted to over last evenlng.and this was aupposed to be in order to aell other months. New crop made a gain of 6 points and was very firm. Chicago. July 16. Cash quotations were aa follows: Flour quiet and unchanged No. 2 spring wheat CifOTOc; No. 8 spring wheat nominal; No. 2 red 73c; No. 2 corn 88ic; No. 2 oats 28c; mess pork $15 60a 16 00; lard $6 676 70; short rib aides (loose) $T ' 907 95; dry salted shoulders (boxed) $5 . 905 00; short clear aides (boxed) $8 458 50. Whiskey $1 10. Leading futures ranged as follows open ing, highest and closing: Wheat No. 3 July 70 70. 69; August 701. 71, 70. Co" No. 2, July 88, 88, 88; August 88, 89, 88. Oats-No. 2 July 264. 261 26; August 26; 26. 26. Mess pork for the year $12 00. Lard Jnly $6 70. $6 70 $6 67; August $6 75. $5 75. 6 70. 8hort ribs July and August $8 15, $3 15, $7 92. St. Lotus, July 18. Flour quiet, steady and unchanged. Wheat closed at aic vi0,JJttSS?ysNa 3 cash 72 July 7272tc Corn easy. c higher1 cash 8434lc; August 8435c. Oats' firm; cash 25fo bid July4 24c Whiskev steady at $1 05. Provisions steady. ?tLTIua JoJt 19. Flour steady and quiet. Wheat southern steady: red 81 83c; amber 8284c: western a shade flrm-MtJ?-2 ,winter d spot and Jnly 581tw ?!?;70uUieri1 ateady and quiet; white 5p53c; yellow 46Q47c- weit ern scarce and higher. CHAKiJtHTOit, July 19.-8piriHtuipen- Uf" d(7' V29fc, ; Roain steady; good strained 90c. ' . COTTON nAIt&KT. By Telecraphlto tbt Konuac Star. . July 18 Galveston, dull at 94o net receipu 2 - bales ; Norfolk, steady atwic net- receiptor i baSesr Baltimore; nominal : S lTn?A -TJles i PWIadelphla, quiet at 102c net. receipts 19 bales i 8a- vanoah, quiet at 10c net ; receipt bales ; New Orleans, ateady at 9jc net riclpts 66 bale; Mobile, nominal at Cfo net receipts balr; Memphis, dull .i 10c net receipu bale; Au gusta, very doll at ICJc net rtcaipts 4 bales: Charleston, quiet at 10c net rc ceipi, 6 hales. itf y Cti to U Mormtoc tttar. : Ljvbrpool. July 19, 12 80 P.M. Cotton steady and in fair demand; middling up lands 5 1116d: middling Orleans 5 11-16J; of 10.000 bales; for speculation and export 1.000 bales; receipu 5.000 bales, of which 2,000 were American. Futures quiet at an advance; July delivery 5 87-64d; July and August delivery 5 88-64d; August and September delivery 5 88 64d, also 5 87-64d ; September delivery 5 18 64d, also 5 37-64d ; September and October delivery 5 25-64d; October and November delivery 5 17-64d; November and December delivery 5 14-64d; December and January delivery 5 14-64d; January and February delivery 5 14 -64d; September delivery 5 88 64d, also 5 3764d . Wheat dull; demand poor; holders offer freely; California No. 1. 7s 2d 7s 3d; red western spring 6a 5J6s 7d; receipu of wheat for the past three days 241,000 cen Uls, including 115.000 American. Corn steady: demand fair; mixed western 4s d; receipu of American for the past three days 35,600 cen Uls. Pork prime mess 6Ss. Lard prime western 35s. Livabtoou July 19, 4 P. M. Cotton middling uplands (1 m c) July delivery 5 S8-64d, value: August and September de livery 5 86-64d, seller; September and Oc to ber delivery 5 25-64d, seller: October and November delivery 5 19-64d. seller; November and December delivery 5 14-64d, value; December and January delivery 5 18-64d, buyer; January and February de livery 5 13-64d. buyer: September deliv ery 5 8S-64d. seller. Futures closed quiet but steady. Sales of cotton to-day included 8 500 bales American. hoierdMorbus r&mps c olie larrhoe ummer Complaints lYSentery cAll Cured dra teaspoonful of PerrxDavis'Pm ((Yler in a little Aft'tor Sugar and Water All Druggists Scixir. feb 13 DAWSm we fr sn Tobacco and Cigars. HAVK IN 8TOCX THE TOLLOWTNQ : IV) boxes all grades Tobaccos, 400 caddlea ail irrades Tobaccos, 10.000 toadUur brandu Clrara. which l am offertiur at vary cIom Cfrurea. Deal ers will do well to ""I" above before porehastnjc ebwwbere. . RAMUTTL BKAR. Sa if 13U 10 Market Bt. Atkinson & Manning, AGENTS, Kortt Carolina Hoie Inmraiice Comji'yi "YYK OFTKB TO TH06X WANTING INSUR ANCE AGAINST fTRX. Policies In this Old and Bailable Home Institution. All losses promptly peid- & PRIKBOex, Prealdeat. CHARLKJ; BOOTSecretary PULASKI OOWPXB. Supervteor. ADRIAN & V0LLEES QTTXR FOR SALS AT -LOWEST MAE KIT PKICZS: 1250Bbto-FLOTO; 200BiCkJMX4 BbU.BICE. 150 BbU SUGAB aU aadea, 97C Backs O0FTXX. RIO, & i O Lag u YEA and JAVA. 3Q Cbest TEA. Greea aad Black. Tabs cboioe BUTTER. 2 Boxes (7HXEBX, Boxes lemons, Hbda. aad Bbli p. R. and Caba Of) Bbls, SYBUP. 200 BoXM and CAKES, 25 Q Cases CAXNTD GOODS, 750 Boxe Landry aod Toilet SOAP. 350 x Smoktoic TOBACCO, 25 0 Tbonn1 C3Q ABS and CIGARXTTES, 5000 Fnj!, PUla' ud Jt. Jyatf WESTERN Horth Carolina Baptist, Eate nine Ridge Baptist. THE PAPER OF.THX.WXSTXK2J BAPTIST CONI .VETTION AND 07 TEX 2aOCO BAPTISTS WEST OP TH BLUE RIDGE. The Beet General AdverUal&jc Medium llo oar Momntaia Section. Josejl E, Carter, Eiilcr J Proprietor PUBLISHED EVESY THURSDAY MORNING XS . . A8Hxyxmr,R.c months, 75c;Clobe of Tea. $1X00. A eopy free w Ave s obecrtbezs with 1M. . ' . , . MARINg 'rt All Hud ititki 8uo S'i( HKb Wavrai Sm.rh.,; ARRlVV.!i M Bteam yacht Louiw. master. ' W , 8tmr Passport. H&riv-r u master "rpfr. Ikrr-. 8teamhip Benefactor ctn(t orfe IT O fi.iiL. '"'Li-id..' Sehr Carrie liell. 2co'tJ&, delphia. E Q Barker &. Cf V EORarker & Co ''L' CLKARKI) 8team yacht Louini- I master. v BiStmr LUbon. Klrk. ( Hr Nor barque Agalha Ii Patcrson, Downing d:C." '''la' L FOREIGN BRI9TOL. EKG-Rsru:- .k. bbls rosip. 1.772 ceska fer,,8 , MARINE IJ j RliTrT List of Teasel. In the fM of ? ton, k. c,:jo,r20!lki.' iThU list does not em braes ;( t.V" Capella (Ger.), 297 t,t ;J.r .. Uo. ' T; wltt Aatha(Nor ). XO t',r. j.,lr ... bane. ' ' Prida (Nor.). S80 t. iun c . & Co. 1 oaj, Erna(Ger ). 582 tons . N;eM.. r. ar aw ja, fin '. " Argo (Nor.), mi nnv a-l' r SCHOONK?- Georgic Clark. fllT n-- Ilariiu&On " '" &a Fannie Wolttn. 295 i.r,LS c B riss fc Co. ' "" Wm Ilopkins. 3Ku,u jT,.. r , riss & Co. l'"' ';nt. San Domingo. 401 tor- litc ,- -riss & Co. " b",!B H 8 Lanfair. 29S tout. Via,- r .. riu & Co. "J"ns Thomas L James. r.'TTton !..,.,-, iiarriM & Co. ' M A Acbonie. 293 ton. ALr.t. G R riss & Co. De for tbli Pon. BA ROVES Albatroai S10 fGer ) Vae. a Livens, , . " BRISK -Dorodea M tx (It Mare-.. M o.rM. v ,. Mai g (Per.) BrodUm. id iuat"h OMYERSITY OF NORTH CAEO0L CIMPF.L HILL. ?. f. 'J'nE SESSION IS DIVIDED INTO TWOTCfe the first betfnnlnr tbe last Ttr.rn-.x lt a aad Ddln at arlnmu tbe k-i: u-tram eartyln January and tnd'.nr tr: Tinrwi Jane. Tnltlon iSOXO far tvbu-rm trm rent and aerrlca. ! 00 irurn:. 71k m mm to pay taltlon are alJowd to ?re vbtruim. eecured 11 possible. TnlUjn In Uit hm Coaree free. Pott Grtduit lnntmim u free. Tbe FacaKr it now rDflifloi,!y .Toara give lntrncUoa,ln a wide mure of nofii For terms In the Lew K boo) iw itkE John Mannln. LL. I). For 1 aiainruw' njt n W. T. Patterson. Borr. tlar"-! U r. fir rpeclal tnformaUon i-: t t. Je2CDAWln ijib Charlotte Female Irstir SESSION BEGIN PEP7 T TH. W NO INSTITUTE FOR ov?i UIi !J If tbe KouLb tiKi advuntjire'. t-ui-n" n un offered bare in every d iartne 11! '-.liurnn Art and MukIc. Od s x;-neti'--i! tn: wk pllnbed teaebera enrad Tb- bc:ic:iir iat mi with cu, wirmed rh tb It---, wr "Ur mi fomaoeis. baa bol and old vnti-r i'" uictrt cla.w appolntmenin a a fcird!ir v in... a e rj reepect no prhfol u ! Sf.ut . ).i":r.fa Deduction lor iwn r or neighborhood Por Cala!oeu" itb fn: HKX. ; ar. i uiis.rv MWa V I!. ATKINS Je 8 Am we fr Fn Liverpool Salt, iAH GOODS, CKACEE2S. XOLA'P m C&aks, Glne. Flour, Ac. Hoop Irrn. I'ar. m -For Rale hy 130. 122 and IJJ S.-irU Jy 13 tf ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cost of any proposed line of advertising in American papers by addressing Go. P. Rowell & Co., Newspsoer Advertm.na Bure.u. IO Spruce L. N Send lOete. for ICO-IJW. 1831 THE CULTIVATOR AND Country Gentleman TEE BEST OF TBS Agricultural Weeklies nal of American Arfctnart. ia pracUcalTalDeofConwctA" 1 ot Oorreapondanoe, In QTOV' of pnblicatlon, lt occnp J g0 la bellered to bare o Mpertor m Urn chief dlTlBtosa of FARM CROPS AND PKOCESS. HORTICXJLTrjRE A FKnTr.O LTV! STOCK ADn, while It alao Include, all rural Interest, snch a "e Ponltry 1 . Fireside Beading Do Jtia summary of the News of the w -. ffnct teaUon to pM te the Atsrt throwlnxlV" upon one of tbemo of all questions-WHEN TO BU t TOSELL It to liberally JSreW " tended to supply, ta a oontlnnaUy w ( cree, and in tbe bert esnse oJJ AJ GREATLY ENIBGED by togb tJ from 16 to pees . .TVlrsLDO T Copy, one year. 9?u.VS5 ratorore. wnen io. ,py. one yter. liPonr CV Sftional.oopy for the y-r ! . ed of oopyfor the rear tree tothe t mraiB TV.CKVR A SU.. ' i.l The Robesonian. f Pabllahed erery We4nd to ByW.W. HcDlAlM"1 sen Ben m nooewos r f Eooro. raletrealatloa Jf ctrnoDd .JJ berlaad. Bladem. OoJumbn. ; tksTdBlaff ooatJea, Manom. 1. ' !