. ... , 7 .1 . . V&i&t.'- best "' 1KB MORNING STAR, the oldest dallj news paper la North Carolina, la published dally.except ft 6) for threo months; 60 eta for one montt, to noaaaT.ai luouner Tear, as do ror six moctna. "i auMriberB. DeiiTered .to city subscribers , ? - . . -at tha rata of IS fiesta mfvmIi tnr BTivnartad mm TTrwwTr tt amiTi ..t.ii .i. moralnir at SI on hat mur fin r-ra fr mnntha. ADVERTISING RATR8 mATT.Vk.nna wmaia i "ott day, SI 00 ; two days, $1 75 ; three days, f 260; , four days, $3 00 ; five days. $8 60 ; one week, $4 00; . " " " 1 " WW III 1 1 W nQVJU W , UUV UIVUVUI $10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $24 00 ; .' - lines of so: blk montos, bw uu: twelve months, sou uu. leu ua. Nonpareil type make one square. .,;:.: - All announcements of Pairs, Festivals, Balls t?: Hops, Plo-Nlos. Society Meetlnes. Politloal Meet Iiurs, &c.,wlll be charged regular advertislnf? rates Notices under head of "Hftv Ttmq" sa rtAntandr Tine for first Insertion, and 15 cents per line for eaon suDseqnent insertion. - no advertisements Inserted In Local Column at any price. A , . i . . . . . . will be charged $100 per square f or eaoh Insertion. Every other da v. three fnnrthn of dallv rntA. Twice a week, two thirds of daily rata. Communications, unless thev contain imaof- I tantnewa-ordtamiBiihrlAflvftnVmnArlwenMAAt, 'SraSSrwa rejected II tfco real name of the author is withheld, An extra oharee will be m&da for dnnMftfl!i!in9 or tripie-ooinmn advertisements. Notices of Marriage or Death, Tribute of Eh sueot. Resolutions of Thanks. &o.. are chanred for as ordinary advertisements, but only half rates wbob paia ror smcuy in aavanoe. At this rate 50 oonts will pay for a simple announcement of Marriage or ueatn. Advertisements on which no speclfled number w lucttjrtions is maraea wui De oontinuea tin ror bld," at the option of the publisher, and charged ui vo tue aaie oi aiscontinuanoe. Amusement, Amotion and Official advertl3emen s one aouar per souare for eaoh insertion. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra according to ice position desired Advertisements kept under the head of "New ;.uveixiBements" wui t ibe charged fifty per cent. extra. uumiMTSjaoua UlBUvMibUlUeU UOlOrO LUU time contracted for has expired, oharged transient Payments for transient advertisements mnst be mace in advance. Known parties, or strangers with rwper referenoe, may pay monthly or qcar- ts.-ly, according to oontraot. All annonnnATnAntj) -nmmiiun.igHi... i XiZs0 . . , . . ivwiiii i mimowviifl vi advertisements. Contract &dvort!fln; x?111 nnt u ollnmiul r peed their space or advertise any thing foreign to their regular business without extra oharge at V1CHUHOUS AibOf3, aemusanoes must De made by Check, Draft, Postal Money Order, Express, or In Registered Only Buch remittances will be at tha rlk of the publisher Advertisers shonM niwttira nuuif h. inm. A- Issues they desire to advertise In. Where no Is- 'MSKSKHs ifJjf'fP .Jtes toe timo bii HuiviiuDvuiuuv m uii uio uruuneuir win rm it i responsible for the mailing of the paper to his a! The Morning Star By WILLIAM 1. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, N. C. SUNDAT MOKNING, OCT. 2, 1887 RIGHT VIEWS ON AN IMPORTANT SUBJECT. Une of the, strongest and best equipped Baptist preachers in the bouth is Rev. Dr. T. T. Eaton, of Louisville, but some years back pas tor in Petersburg, Va. He is a man ot superior parts. In the Baptist -Recorder, in Louisville, he has been opposing the Blair-Federal-Pater-nal-Pedagogy Bill. He is a man who thinks. Two objections are urged against the monstrous bill- urst, the injury to our system of government; and, second, the harm done to education. These are the points that over and over again have been urged in these columns. The States are not by any means unable to provide educational ad- 'uu6" mo uuiiuren. lnis is assumPd h,,t rmt nrnrraA : tfc? . V " -auy ,uWI Southern States II1I1H a r r HAhAl Rhnnr tTiof V. Ct. I . fcUC uuiu ia coming up ' I i , . I - r ; -mcmgiy to its duty, and is doing a noble work for education. , - I Dr. Eaton says, thinking over: ana it is worth "It is to-dav within the sound-minded person in the lUnited Stated 10 iearn now to read and write. Anil thon too, the advantages of secular education have been greatly exsggerated. The An archists and Socialist in tho TTnh and write, and many of them are 0,4 highly educated. " "Secular education" is not are- former. The prisons of the world are crowded with educated scoun drels. The Socialists and "MiV.;i;aa "..v,-5 luillO bO are aU educated. The best way to kUl off wild theories is to enlighten '$WM themin3- That we hold. But the way to make men better as well as wiser is to educate the heart. r.v v, VVfl T.hint' tho f 1 1 : n . TTT rlt - - vuw tvuvwiue reaecuons Wl3Prom the LoQisville Courier-Journal are on the right line. It eayB: r'lHnn.t! ,n I mf eKSffi S mffJ thepeopK M&m ;.''SSr!?i,whic51, ejve3 th.ese. men their m A i.tJL.: u"lf ?7 "--18 .lo extend -.-.u.KjUYoUur puonc scnools. It we I disinfect th fmii Df v.- v t. we I W agitators seeki to nnlunn . wu'- mesa ' " , ffar to poison, we have httte to ife To imorove o.,r h,. . '. i: -i improve OUT eCUOOlS We dn nnt morn mnnoTT A ' "CCL I ? ?e.m!?' ut we .?eed more wiedom ; niri r,u.r j I ,r """o uum Nn nannin , , r viiita. n!,2P Wa8ever edfrom decay by outnde pressure; redemption comes not r "-uvuiimuu uuiues not , s, . nmeni 10 a People, but from i the people to the goverment." aV' There is moca of real wisdom and J - acuteness in that passage. Avoid Sone-sided education." Make edn. XSon better. To do this tri nA ".. " "V I inn t i uw IUO 7lUTflf, notnro I f Wbo have been trained intellectually . - 11 J I antf morally are never hnrt I,; Agrarianun,, SooialUm aoy other ' I muaiuus ism. It. ja 'tha r i ".'One-Sidetl oflnnotiW , t . n I .ani become dunee and Vl. t l.I - IT Vacated rnial "'B" sUastothe-needofacU acitareryiew " - V , - of " what-- education isof what its ends are. ' As the people have broad er, more accurate views of the great educational question will thev re- 1 - - - mw I CD J I 01 tue 6CD00I8. and Will thev insist. upon sieaay ana assured improve i ment in the system. But the last view of the Courier- Journal is the truest and most inci sive. The people of the South must I rely upon themsel ves and not upon others. They must make sacrifices that will do them good, and not look to the public Treasury for help. The I true, pnilosophlc view 18 that given I , - . I aoove; a people must be developed I xvUu. ireiwuvc upuu uuibiucib i9 Paralyzing, is sure to destroy man hood, self-reliant and in thn A 6elf-respect. Mo manhood can be preserved under a system of eleemo synary gain. Read what the Courier- Journal says in that last paragraph and you will find the very essence of the principle that shuts out Blairism and Federal crutches and Federal intermeddling and supervision. The philosophy of the schools taught that society was improved bv workiner from above. The r- I e y-ll ... , I llgion OI the Christ taught that SO c,aI regeneration was to be secured I hv bep-innmo- bplnw anr! mnrVmrr I - ueginnmg oeiow ana working up, Mnt 1 ,; , I ' r o bGgin.in the heart aDd WOrklQS out" ward in the daily life. All this was contrary to man's plan. So in edu cation; true regeneration, real life, certain relief from ignorance, must come by working from within and not from without. In other words. pePle mU8t helP themselves, do their own work and keep out Federalism and means death. Paternalism, that IN BRIEF. Our esteemed and acute contem- porary, the Lynchburg iV, accuses tne Estab "of prancing all around a 1 4ucbi,iuu anu not toucninff tne point." This is said because of our last reply to what it said of Randall and the Stab and their Democracy. TUn A7V, . . i , t-. , ,. iuc cto seeuia 10 imnK xtandaii a thoroughly sound Democrat and quite as sound as the Star is. That comes from the standing-point of observation. The Nines is in Hvm- I pathy with Randall as to his eco- nomic views the maintenance of a Protective Tariff and the abolition ot internal taxation. The Stab an tagonizes the Philadelphian on these questions. It says squarely and 1 t piainiy mat a man who favors the TXT rn rr - I 11111 auu iree smoses ana lree annks, wbile keeping up tho tax tne commodities of life, is not OUr kinrl nf Ttamnnr-nt mk.t. vluvuiuu, n uati i ever else he may be. If such a man is right and his views are Dem- ocratic, then he is also a Republican, , ' " ' ror tne republicans hold those views . .1 . t in meir integrity and force. Mr. Randall has thrino Ana;aA i,: ' . . 1 "J m the Cnno-roBO ta t & ""-'J pvsuicu lb 11UU1 fulfilling promises, and strangled in it. K.Vft, n , 7. -"a wwv wen uuuceivea aitempts to readjust and reduce the War Tw,tt He is retained in the House through Republican favor and ar. un tuaroiina mem- UC1B wuo uave eervea witn cim in the House have very little confidence in him. They have witnessed his treachery. HOTCH-POTCH. Charles Reade was a great novel ist. He did not Iova f vm. j mua vuijr wrote doggerel of an inferior kind. But he admired Scott and was at tracted to Tennyson. But his pas sion was Shakespeare. Lord Ma caulay could repeat from memory the wnn a sr iawn i .... i t- i . xwauwtj ajvbw nat an- I oord,ng to Mr. E. H. House, a very agreeable and clever man of lettfirs. Reade knew "bv heart." n i,f . . " I akeepearewrote-plays and poems, ote from Mr. House's de- ligMfnl second paper on Reade m the Atlantic Monthly for October. He savs: I n ... I . yn name would always kindle a flame n his soul, and, if intelligently brought forward could change his customary tacU tamitv ti n e nnn0 -v.-.i. ..J7 , " , . '"VJ ou ciuqueuce oi WHICH lew knew I him to be capable. Shakesneare wf n?Z "" tro uapame. onasesDeare was tha I m m -e "'"e, nj tuu, auu i nave neara him cn that he thus carried about with him 1 library better than mnU mf th,hl.m. say a j- uciicr man most men liad in their "i apisyinatne left no com plete record of his reflections upon Shake speare's life and wrrt Thil" . subject to which he gave deeper thought When in tha mnnrl t . ..o""- . - -wu w uiacuuree upon it ne rwW8y uhe ureticence ad immobility which usually characterized him. and be- c&me singularly animated na iAYT- S TT. . . . ' 'UU1C, 7 " uiu reCBDL 7 VI Bit Art Htraffn.J A ... ... ""louwiu-UBDn Jteners fascinated by descriptions of tha! town: not na ho hi s .:. , . .;AJ "?"1.e!ri7 morning he held his iZli SSS 'd.."?. P' " lKB82ffl a nouriahmir oiti-ron . . c I ,l, .r " , '' """I u care dui I nrOSneritV. TiTrn,nn S?tf!S,,Ly ?arned SS'.S?"'.!"'" th. living i -SiiVJgXi ui sua earlier nhnrata -.ifnu- " , I dthe Hearth Shakespeare- to hear th t-h IOM, W e seemed I ???'XT' - ' - - . - - i not the conjecture "of a, fanciful enUro-v siast." .V . ,;.-- - Mr. Edward King, an American poet, has published in London, irf costly form, a volume entitled "A Venetian Lover." He had before made a reputation by a volume of verse called "Echoes from the Orient," made up of pictures, songs and legends from the far East. His last volume has been much praised by some of the most influential of Southern newspapers. Mr. King is not of the South, we believe, but he it was who got up the imposing il lustrated papers for the Century Magazine some eight or ten years since, under the title of "The Great South." We have not read the poem. There is a new work of considera ble interest that Funk and Wagnalls, of New York, have published. It is an "Encyclopedia of Living Divines and Christian Workers of All De nominations." Rev. Dr. Philip Schaff is the editor. That guaran tees thoroughness. We promised some months ago that we would discuss Heine, but wo have not had the leisure necessary to J v nnrmif im t r.nt n- ....... 1. o: permit us to enter upon such a dis cussion. He was bevond all doubt a writer of rare genius, and is as inter- esting an author as belongs to the great literature of his country. The 'following we clip from a criticism m the New York Times, is excellent. It is exact and felicitous: There are some who love art betttr than nature, ato them Heine is the perfection fIw .55 A"1 . limP gave it brilliancy. He played on it as would a musician, ana you roilow mm hair cry. ing, but if you are of a certain age your laugh is rare. His laugh partakes a little of the leer. He mocks at all that is sacred God, and man, and woman. His was a wonderful intellect, not broad nor massive, but drawn and sharpened to the finest edge! cuTting ouzeTnot to hew thugha'coat or m.ail ana we suppose all men have their narlmil aw linn. While Donnelly is amusing the credulous by his absurd attempt to make the great prosaic and logical lawyer, Francis Bacon, the most imaginative and many-sided of all poets, the Appletons have published a valuable help to the Btudent of Shakesnearo. Tt ia "An InA- ing References to Notable Passages and Significant Expressions, etc." It will not supersede Mrs. Cowden Ularke, or Bartlett, or Twiss, or any of the other half-dozen arrangers of indexes, vocabularies, concordances, etC. It Will be found, nnvorthcloou J W.MaVA. ODj very usetul. All important wbrds are illustrated by the passages in which they occur. There are out linoo nf fl,n .1... l i . i ... ui mo piavB auu BKeicnes or tne more important characters. The opinions of the ablest critics are also given " wlu Prove a vaiuabio ad dition to a hbrarv Tennessee is to have an interesting work. Mr. J. B. Lindsley is pre paring the military annals of his State, which are to appear in several volumes. It is said to be a pains- I . i lalunS work aQd every company, regiment, etc., will have a history. The first volume is out and fills 1,000 pages. It contains portraits. Ten nessee furnished 08,000 soldiers in the last war. Whether this is for one side or both sides we are not in formed. The second volume will give the names and the classification. POINT. Our good friend Dr. Laffertv. of the Richmond Christian A says so many good things in the course of a year that if gathered they would make a delichtful vol- nma .r r, R nl Vl nrna r i- nnn t i "l auA- ur eye naoDened tn P half eheet of the i89e of 8tn September last, and thft "rnn thinea" abound. T?nr in,t,n t-l... I w v-uo. xuat, i 'epresentattve Pennsylvania Metbo- William McDonald, at meeting of the "National As- tl, vr..- ., . 80ciation for the promotion of Holi- nessm ' said thi. ...t.-. u ien yu inal n one who uses to- bacc, caQ 1x5 entirely sanctified.' 'Savi 1 Routed several clergymen, 'that'sgo- 1Pt a litUo tnn fa. r 'u. "-6 -uu isr, ior some Of our hpjit I -misters use the article ' 'Whot i w uae me article. 'What 1 haw. flftlt I l-n . " JNo man can be entirelv nava bacco. 'You're a liar!' an an it, Di. well known man in the audience." Dr. Lafferty comments thus: "The contradiction nf tha rather abruot and nOintPfl hilt. nnrrlAn aVIa A fanatic is often a knave as well as a madman In another place discussing the "Men who make. Methodise ,he wntv, caustic Doctor of Letter. .ayS People under size wear Kioh.iiooi k. and beavers. Pice ntlt on imnnrtn S;!er"" d"' P la dij. hm . w. . . Here m a hit nf fnn A,-tA . " cuicu si uur friends tbe North Carolina Baotists: Sfr "J? wth- Th. 1SSZ STSg Carolina iook adranUoa nr th -u.-n t I H? vival at Ir "Boiline Bn'rina ng Springs ' 4 Again, he pn.he.hi. prod iototte 1 " - r:." ' ' .. ,f , i-f i 1 enpased bigotry -and sectionalism; of ; the-Methodist Harpers ' after this style: ''-r' "There la a quickening of conscience. The Harpers have destroyed the DlctuTe plates of their Weekly' duriniT-the war. A full-page illustrated lie in the face of fact moved to shame even '.The Journal of Civilization. " The necessity of gathering into the Church persons making a profession of Christ in a revival season, is thus j'PPOy illustrated : A scythe chariot may be driven in fury through ripe grain. The fteld will be reap ed The wisest way is to put a "JlcCom mick' machine and self-binder. The bar vest is cut and cared for at one and the same time " A falso notion concerning the toil of the brain is thus corrected : "All workers by hand or head are bread winners alike one by the sweat of the brow, the other by the sweat of tho soul. Honest-made wealth is coined sweat out of the brawn or the brain." Tho difference between the ideal and the intensely practical, finds a felicitous illustration in tho subjoin ed paragraph : "The medical student looks at the hu man figure only with sn anatomical eye. The Venus of Milo does not ravish his vision as "a thing of beauty and a joy forever." He viewB with admiration, not the divine . image, but the sculptor's skill in arranging muscle, tissue, joint, with accuracy and art. The whole thing is a matter of inches, calipers and chisel" The direct, earnest preaching that I ur- i I brings down your game by sending a I " J o minnAl n n .n liAH.M 1 r 3 1 -.uKa.,Ww.,uui, ,s euiFIia8.zeu uy me power ot contrast as follows: "How futiltj has been a 'systematic' ser mon at a camp-meetiDg. A routed foe has rallied while a martinet and tacti cian has exhibited hia perfection in tho manual of arms and "marked time." Syn tax, the graces and textual precisions, are not the winged arrows of victorious min istry " i he last four are from number of tho Advocate. another In his great speech on the British finances (the Budget) in 1792, Wil liam Pitt, the Prime Minister, stated that he had a surplus of more than 400,000, or about $2,000,000 of our money. He proposed to dispose of this surplus by applying it in equal proportions to the dimiuution of taxes and the reduction of the public debt selectiog for special diminution those taxes which weighed upon the poorer classes. See Lecky vol. 5, page 204. Here is a guide or solution fo"" political economists of our time and especially for legislator l.t. debt be paid off, and let those taxes be reduced or lifted altogether that bear heavilv upon the toilinrr maP . - o TUB PERIODICAL!. Cur Little Ones for 'Octobar is a daisy in full bloom. It will make clad the little hearts. Price $1.50 a year. This number completes Vol. VII. A new volume be gins wilh the November number, when it will bd a good tianc to subscribe Russell Publishing Co., 86 Bromfleld St . Boston. Nortli Carolina MediealJournal for Sep tembcr has the followiog original comrau- nications: Remarks on the Nature and Treatment of So called Puerperal Fever, by Wm C. Dabney. M. D. ; Tionitus Auiium, by John Herbert Claiborne. Jr.. M. D. ; Eight Successive Cases of Gastro intestinal Affections of Infancy and Child hood, Treated by Rectal Iojections of Ice Water and Salol (Salycilate of Phenol), by W. B. Pritchard, M. D. The Selected Papers, Correspondence. Reviews. Edi torials, &c , give variety and value to the number. Price $3 a year. Single copies 38 cents- Drs. Wood and Thomas editors, Wilmington, N. C. 1 North's Philadelphia Musical Journa for September is No. 9 of Vol. second. It is a large, well printed monthly and con tains four pieces or music. It has a gocd deal of reading also. Price $ 1 a year, single copies 10 cents. F. F. North & Co , Publishers. 1308 Cnestnut St., Phil. "Praise rrom sir Hubert Stanley. New Orleans States, Dem. The Mokniitg Stab, of Wilmins. .i. XT n . . i p u, N. 0., completed the twentith year of lts life last Thursday. We ur heartiest felicitations to the Stab on the occasion, and n. t.nr t. i.An. l.. v- , orona voufh may be coS tTo'Sa manhood oorreeDondini? in trnfrth and usefulness with the annro rtanT. it. IF. T with the s eSv TniZT present promise": The Stab is , eminently sound Democrat rna I m nontlTr Q T T -. I faithful m its convictions of rieht' f V1 tj?flbelter 5ut ulet "hlppers hold and fearless in their ad vocacv Goo In! So? : 2 rCal0iiober iSlc. clos government has no sTZf'fl ClSJl9 nor annnA mx..!: . . ' I " muia" more siaiwart I champion. On the long list of our ezchancres them ia n r.an. . - , ft-1 o re- ceive with a more eenuine welCOm. - rOLITICAL JPQIXTS. John Swinton, who has bank rupted himself in his efforts to establish an orean for work! clined last nirtt to head the ticket of the Progressive tabor Party Iq the present tauipaiga. vCW yi,rW. 7nd 7)m I - The New Tort lifT!:. , . - f"uo uave made una slate. Mr. Clevelanrl k I cHiTS SuolL ineBouthern Congressmen from suarproducing districts are going to find that they made a great mistake in fnlinw Jng Randall into the Repnblican camp when the qnestion of tariff reform came np in the Forty-ninth Conors, A.in...T. TT. Q Ae Dem w ; As the New York Times puts ir mere are anv" Dprnnrmtu ,v, I SUiS I"1?, ' v : - 1 mey were I . They were not preseni VSSSy SVK- Ther LV?." ! aanot exist, and therefore TthV ZknTtZ. I rwo.r ,K"t. ur8 mey cannot be I ao. nut exist, and therefore Tther ?J- " . ' njbody. COMMBRGIAI;-: WILMINGTON M ARICKT STAR OFFICE. Oct 1, O P. AL 8PIRIT8 TURPENTINE The market opened firm at SO cenU pergsllon. with sales of the day's receipts at quotations ' ROSIN Market firm at 72J cts per bbl for Strained and 77 -cents for Good Strained, , ' TAR Market quoted firm at $1 30 per bbl of 280 lbs.; with sales of Tecelpts at quotations CRUDE TTJRPENTINE-Dieiiliers quote at .$1 65 for. Virgin and Yellow Dip and $1 00 for Hard. COTTON The market was quoted quiet. Sales 1,800 bales on a basis of 8,11-10 ceD ts for Middling. Quotations at the Produce Exchange were as follows Ordinary ....6 1-10 cUB Good Ordinary 7T " Low Middling 8 5-16 ' " Middling 8 11-10 " " Good Middling 9 CORN Quoted firm at 60 cents for yel low to bulk, and 63 cants in sacks; white is quoted at 64 cents in bulk, and CO cents in sacks for cargoes. TIMBER Market steady, with quota tions as follows: Prime and Extra Ship ping, first-class heart, $8 00010 00 per M. feet; Extra $6 007 50; Good Common Mill, $3 005 00; Inferior to Ordinary, $3 004 00. .PEANUTS Market firm. Prime 55&60 cents; Extra Prime.7580 cents; Fancy 00 cents per bushel of 28 lbs Wlf'K Marb-Af P.i. ..i.l , i I . 4ia4c: Prime S&Slc ner nound. Nobles of Rough crop all marketed. RECEIPTS. Cotton Spirits Turpentine. Rosin Tar Crude Turpentine-. 1,010 bics 92 casks 556 bbls 157 bbls 58 bbls rorros and NAVAL TO It RE STATEMENT. RECEIPTS For tho month of Sept. 1887. Uotion. Spirit. Bonn. Tar. Crude. 38,591 5.461 23,005 5,755 1.444 RECEIPTS For the month of Sept. 1886 Oolton. Spirit. Itorin. Tar. Crude. 12,802 6,413 26,461 3.C66 2.834 EXPORTS For the month of Sept 1887. Cotton. Spirit. Rosin. Tar. Crude. Domestic 3.529 8.168 0.571 5.632 2.020 I Foreign. 9.800 6.715 15,673 000 00 Total. 13,329 9,883 22,244 5, 632 2.026 EXPORTS For the month of Sept. 1880 Cotton. Spirit. Botin. Tar. Crude Domestic 1.291 1,595 1,200 4,568 2 450 Foreign.. 000 2.971 11.&J2 10 000 Total.. 1,291 4.566 13,062 4.578 2.450 STOCKS Ashore and Afloat, Oct. 1, 1837. Ashore. Afloat. Total. Cotton 21.252 4.665 25.917 8pirits 2.828 000 2 833 Rosin. 98.977 3.713 102.690 4.482 5 4,487 414 00 414 Tar. . . Crude. STOCKS Ashore and Afloat, Oct. 1, 18S6. Cotton. Spirit. Rosin. Tar. Crude. 11.679 8.57C 99,920 1.123 574 QUOTATIONS. Oct. 1. 1837. Oct 1. 18S0 Cotton.. 8 11-16 9 5-16 25 OA pi?u'- 30 Rosin 72i77t 75 80 $1 30 $1 52J Tar. imniiNric diakkets l By Toieeraph to tho If ornlxu; Star.) Financial. iww roM. Oct. I. Noon. Money easy at 56 per cent. Sterling exchanee 4,9J48p and 484484J. State bonds du and steady. Government securities uuii suu Bieauy. Xl14VT 9ct- criing-Sterling """"fc- w uuk aic&uy at 4"UJ485, A l y " 0 Per cent., closing offered at 2 per cent. . Government securi tus dull but steady; four per cents 124 three per cents 108. State bonds dull but steady: North Carolina sixes 123; fours 97 asked. OommcertaL jmbw York, Oct. 1. Noon. Cotton eaay, wun aaies or 211 bales; nuddling uplands 91 cents; middling OrleanTlBl cenU; futures opened and closed steady li mt ti 0. AMl .... J k. oVn,. " quoiauona: Octo ber 9.1916c; November 9.129 10c- Flour steady. . raLhlg ler 0001 beer. Pork steady u &vnio ou. Lara Arm 'at $6 85 BPt turpentine steady at 83c. Rosin a $1 i1 12' Freights steady. Nltw .X0RK. Oct, 1, Even ing. -Cotton eaay, wun saies or zii bales; middling . . - O" -w.wvm SSSSM'SfiSKffifS ports to Great Britain itrvi 7 franco 3,754 bales, to the continent 27 fna Dales: stock at all U. H rrt. ka a tT" aodOrwTS v7rvTe buffi !ffi IZVAC- leaving off firm at or near thaKutHi... loo - i a " B """"ocuii, I auu ""aiijr bkutb; casanrm out quiet No. October 5151c, closing at Sljo; No- w.. uumiig ai oc. uaia poiswaay; ro. a Uctober 83aS31c No- . ooT w -osootc; iecember nominal M5JC; omirX6d 7? 3134ic Hops steady. Coffee fair Rio on soot ntP.rtv at f 18 35; No 7 Rio October $17 151740- ft.,.J 9 a ' YmoT f 17517 75. bugar firm and quiet: centrifugal k 7.1 fair refining quoted at 4 13 164c: refined' .'SSSw ,le,' taase. dull'. Rice VfJ AnA 55iet- iV?" J? oU ofd fV 1 , wuu? BQ itoJC for refined. "SS.?1 22U?- 8pW- tS """oowauj ai ooc. uiaes steadv and In fair muml Wnni -.5 T..? an !P VS M 22. ,'iS -!SDer ftt 7f' 75- lights steady Sam ad1" 9"1M: P". Pr 8 165111 M- r baIe 5 a re- hS-W'98? J?8' 'ulurea closed steady at a decline; sales 64.100 bale at th fi;- qnoUUons: October i:t" Ml"SS 0 82e? Anrii o Ii AlSiTSJ curcioo nt 5tn n..v kI?.1 Tlou' 5alL??a changed foUTw.7 lSS " , T""' pring T0f71cr No. - 8 sprini? 65c: No. 2 mri ? .TL-.' r" i2ii2tc' OaU-No. 2 M shoulders (boxed) $3 253 tO; short clear ides (boxed) $3 10&3 15. - Wbkkev l 10. The leading Xularee ranged follow opebio?, hlgheet and closing: Wheat No.v 20ctoUr71f, 71 J,70f; November 72,. 721, 721; May 79x, 7i. 79. Corn No. 2 Octo ber 421. 42. 421; November 42. 42J. 424; May 45. 45. 45. OaU-No. 2 October 26; November 26 ; May 291. SO. 29. Mets pork all the year $12 00. $12 05. $12 05: January $12 374. $12 60. $12 421 Lard October $6 40. $8 40, $6 87f ; November $8 35, $6 40. $6 85; May $8 75. Short ribs October $7 90. $7 90. $7 80; January $6 30, 8 35. $8 85. ' Bt. Louis. Oct 1. Flour tteady and un changed. Wheat firm with an upward tendency; on stronger cables, a reported decrease of 1,000,000 bushels in Liverpool stock and a belter NewYof k market, prices advanced ilc: a decline ;in 'Chicago caused some weakness and the early ad vance was lost, but good buying set in again aod the close was firm and irc above yesterday; No. 2 cash 70c: October 7070ic: November 7171Jc; May 80 80 tc Corn firm; an advance of ric was made early, but weakened In sympathy with declines elsewhere, but closed firm ; No. 2 cash 39 Jc; October 89S9ic; Decem ber 38fc; May 414Hc Oat, cash lower; futures steady; cash 24Jc; October 23fc, closing at 23Jc bid; Msy 28jc. Whiskey steady at $1 05. Provisions firm. Pork quiet and unchanged at $14 75 for small lota and $15 35 for standard mess. Lard nothing doing, quoted at $6 25. Dry salt meals shoulders $5 25; long clear $7 80; clear ribs $7 90; short clear $8 20. Bacon shoulders $6 256 50; long clear and clear rib $3 758 85; short clear $9 15 9 25 Hams quiet and unchanged at $12 00 13 00. Cikciitnati, Oct 1 Flour firm. Wheat in good demand; No. 2 red 77c Corn in moderate demand; No. 2 mixed 45c. Oats quiet; No. 2 mixed 27J27fc. Pork steady; repacked $15 00. Lard steady and firm. Bulk meats tteady ;short rib $3 50. Bacon easy; short dear $9 259 871; ehort rib $3 758 87J. Whiskey firm at $1 10. Hoes steady; common and light $3 75 4 80; packing and butchers' $4 504 95. UALTTMOHK. Oct. 1. Flour nfnurlv Arm Wheat southern steady and quiet for choice red 7831c; amber 8184c; western steady, closing dull; No 2 winter red on spot ;79i79ic. Corn southern quiet and steaay; white 60 61c; yellow 5254c; western dull but steady. Savaksah, Oct. 1. Spirit turpentine Arm at 301c. Rosin steady at 90971c. Cilarlestos, Oct 1. Spirits tui pen tine firm at 30c. Rosin dull; good strained 85c. MARINE. Ior Almanac 4et. 2. Bun Rises 5 55 A M Sun Seta 5.43 PM Day Length llh 43 m High Water at Smith vUle 7 24 AM High Water at Wilmington.... 9.14 AM ARRIVED. Sieam yacht Louise, Dozier. South rort master. 8tmr Cape Fear, Tomlinson, Favette ville. C 8 Love & Co. 3 CLEARED. Steam yacht Louise. Dozier. South rort. master. Steamship Benefactor, Chichester, New Tork. II G Smallbones. Schr William and Richard. Patrick Mayaguez, P It. Geo Harries & Co. cargo by E Kidder's Son. EXPORTS. COASTWISE. New York Steamship Benefactor 447 KaUa .s . M sr a i . , .A, , , , ' J caeas spirits turpentine, 142 bbls rosin, 675 bbls, 12 cases tar 25 bbls pitch. 15 do crude. 80 29 dO riCC. 10 bbl in hacra challort 90 pkga furniture, 34 pkgs mdse, 50.000 FOREIGN. Mayagtjkz P Tt nip wm;. j Richard 238,681 feet lumber. MARINE DIRECTORY. List of VhmIi In tn Port of TVIImliC. S3 ton, rf. O., Oct. 1, 1887. lima list aoc not embraoo vomcIs ender ion- STEAJISniPS. Benacre (Br.). 1130 tons, Ogg. CPMebane Thornycroft (Br ). 1122 tons. Pugsley. C P llebane. Nocoaian (Br.) 872 tons. Jones, C P Me bane. . Benefactor, Chichester, n G 8mallbones BAJIQTJES. Sirene (Ger.) 501 tons, , E Peschau Westermann. Frithlof (Nor.), 441 tona. Johnsen, Pater son. Downing & Co. Rialto, (Dan,). 438 tons. Jorgensen, Ileide & Co. Adolph (Ger.). 523 tons, Westendorf, Ileide fc Co. Akerhjthen (Swed.), tons, Johnson. Pa terson, Downing & Co, WLa.d?lIr (Nor-. tons, Knudsen. Heide &1C0. Ferdinand (Br ). 416 tons, Bhesner. E Peschau & Weatrmnn GspYi(tx 643 ton8' Kio- A1 Albatross (Ger.). 310 tons. Dale, E Peschau & Westermann. BRIGS. Edith, 183 tons. Foster. E G Barker & Co, n ltXU 298 ton- Woodlawn. Geo fiarriss & On ' Franconia. 216 tons, Falker, E G Barker & DlTidnunt- 300 ton. Merret. E G Bar Ker s: fxv WAi!lif?x ?i5.hard- 252 tons, Patrick, Geo Ilarrijta : rv ' Geo II Ames, 421 tons. E G Barker & Co.i 1 Tt Uiua wni ii-nott, Geo liar- 1UO Jay BROPVITS IRON HEADACHE INDIGESTION BILIOUSNESS DYSPEPSIA NERVOUS PROSTRATION MALARIA CHILLS and FEVERS TIRED FEELING GENERAL DEBILITY ?A2tt? the BACK SIDES IMPURE BLOOD CONSTIPATION FEMALE INFIRMITIES RHEUMATISM NEURAT.nt a KIDNEY AND LIVER TROUBLES FOR SALE HV it r r Ff fwsiw li o. Trade-Markaod oed Red TAKE NO OTHER. teen fiin fknaetiki BITTERS holerdMorbus one ummer Complaints lYSentery tt Cured bra teaspoon ful of PerrrMvisPom Killer in a little cr Sugrar and lifter AU-Bruggists szutT ee 23 DiWlm we r N. H. SMITH. REAL ESTATE AGEN! rAYr.TTEVILLn ; Ocrrcrrvoti'if-nrc sij; j,, . ..... . , bny or soil lana?. fctt.w plorod to l3TS.leat Uf.w. ctr IV .. laoRt men of FaTcitev.: OFFICE AT S7ETfB DLPoT, Cf.rar Xtjufcrl a.-;r u.-rjai'.-i2 fu Wbcre k FTTI.L '-TOf'5 o BEST ICF, COAL ASD WOOD Ca.a be foid at hOZST PHX E- . for th-s e!ct;, Ic--. 1,, v.w. l )- WDtWi;' FAEHS AHD LANDS FOs SiliT ISTPROVZD L.OfDS. TIMBERED HT SWAMP IJLKDS and TOWN PhOPELTIES The Coantles of Eobeson. Bladen. Cnmlrifcfl(l, and ail adjacent eectiona, offer ae or.itrtnn Uea for Investment. ITie openlni? of direc t wars North make the SHOE HEEL section 1 NBW AND rNVITINO FIELD rn7 wv V ci. denlae and Pmlt. nimn mH v,- . Ural imnTlmajJUArl 1n ,n n, , . ... . pohit for freight. KaUwajTi North, 8ou!A 1um and west. ynick transport North by eevfra rontea. A grand opportunity for rk?o 1eto menta, and a better one for pr&etJcaJ lumir uni hOTtlcnltTirlsta Conie and eoe or vrrixe to O. II. BUXTn.EE. Real EfUto Acect, Shoe lit:, OT 5 DAWtf Eobesoa (o.. N. C. Palmetto Bailroad Co. t QN AD AFTEK WEUNESDAT," SZTCK 6ER 21st. 15sST, Train wlil run . ! ::owi daf'y except Sundays : GOI.G ORTII: No. 1-PASSENGEIt AND FEEIGET: Leave Cheraw. a. C li.ffi AM. " Kollock Station n.A.n. " Oaborna. (Fla.r Mtatinnl .V. AM. Arrlre Hamlet, N. C IS.lt r. M. GOIG SOI'TII: No. 2 PASSENGER AND FREIGHT : Leave Hamlet, V. C 341P.M. "eborne. Fg Station) 4 cr. P M. KoUoc bt&tion .4.SP.I Arrive Cheraw. S. C 4.51 f. WM. MONCTEE, aep 28 tf SnX Cotton Bagging. 1000 nslf r 18 EAGf;NG 3QQ Boies TOBACCO. 200 Dc?fenoT- gQQ Barrels GOOD TWVR. For tale low by HALL & PEARS ALL, ApenU for Duponfs Gun Powder. ep 13 DWf Bacon, Flour, Lard. 100 Eoxa" D" 8 p" Fins? QQQ BkU FlOtTR, all rrradML, 2Q Ca.es LARD. For aale low tj an 9 tf wti.t.taws RANKIN m- New Crop P.E. Molasses rlRST CARGO OF TUB SE-4JS-X 3QQ BHDS OUST AERIVJtD). NOW lag. and for sale la lota to roit by ,.,,, MU WILLIAMS. KAXKI!- Sugar, Coffee, Rice. Q Bbls Refined UDOARS. kcka Cbclce RIOCXFF-t rQ Bbl CAROLINA RICE, For talc low bj . , ,v, an 9 U WILLIAMS. ltayHl Glue, Hoop Iron,Nails. OK Bbl DISTTLLKR'S GLrF.i gQQ Bundle HOOi' IKON, Kemi NAUS. For aale low by . au9U WILUAMB. RAN:N The Biblical itecorder PCBUSHZD FT Cdwardi, Brouglilon A RALEIGH, N. C BIT. C. T. BAILVY. KSV O. B. KAiiKIiia. A.Kiclii' Orsa of Hortl Carolina Baptists In Its 44 lh Tear. EVERY BAPTIST SHOULD TAKB IT At an A4vertialBff Kedlnxa TJnssrpMMxL Only $3.00 Par Tear. THISPAPEH W. VH 4 fco uu, ia uu. LATd, per ioo lbs, $8 40 1 - ' ' atfdreai I aatstt. v frmr-TnAT, EKORD1 Ealalf. u