PDBLI8HSD AT -AT- $1.50 a Year, in advance. SSSS3SS3SSSSSSSS8 ggSSgS8S88888S88 88888888888888888 88888888888883888 a - x x 3 3S3SS3SSSSS3388SS SSSSSS8SSSS88SSSS 88882882888888888 888SSSS8S88S8883S. 05-. C CO rtfntornd at tVia 'Piof flPRna at TXTtlminCTtnn N. C, a9 second-class matter. Subscription Price. The subscription price of the Wkkk ia Star is as follows : -iinjjle Copy 1 year, postage paid, $1.50 .' " " 6 months. " " 1.00 "3 " " " .50 IflH. PAH.NSILL ,IBBIiAND,9 WOK. Tho speech Mr. Parnell delivered m New York, on Sunday last, was calm aud moderate. In no offensive sense can he be called an "agitator." ilis discussion of the land question,, as applied to Ireland, was fair and decorous, and directed to the calm judgment of reflecting men. lie is not seeking to obtain a redress of grievances through inflammatory ap- peals, or to evoke from the friends of Ireland outbursts of wrath and indig nation, lie is seeking a remedy for Ireland's, wrongs by an appeal to le- yai, uuusiiLUiiuiiai luciuuus. mi. m. at' nell is not in America lo raise funds for either buying out landlords or in stigating a rebellion. This he expli citly declares, lie says any moneys raised' shall be applied to carrying on a campaign of argument and facts against the land system. Mr. Parnell advocates the purchase of great es tates by the government, and the cre ation of a peasant proprietary. He does not propose revolution, but a constitutional redress of grievances in the way indicated. He is aiming lo create such an overwhelming pub lic sentiment against the present sys tem that the British government will he coerced into remedying the wrongs of bTs country. Mr. Parnell does not object to but favors earnestly the raising of funds to relieve the present great and very pressing distress of Ireland. The re sponse that will be made in the United States to his appeals will be hearty and liberal no doubt. When . t. 'CP ' . 1 : i ne cry oi lsmiue comes up me peo ple of this country will not be deaf or indifferent. But Ireland needs political relief also, and Mr. Parnell la mAirinn .n t rn a I nnjl nnt io uiuiiiig uauiiuuaijf suu wisely III that direction. The Charleston Weios and Courier says pertinently of the nrnoanl. anil otimi c o "What Ireland asks fur ia freedom ami justice, and if England is not willing to ad vaBce the money to enable the Irish tenant farmers to become land-owners, the agita tion must and will continue 'until Ireland is , independent ! It was proclaimed long ago that England's danger is Ireland's oppor tunity. The danger and tbe opportunity will come. "There is in Eogland a strong sentiment in favor of ameliorating tbe condition of tbe Irish by making it easy for tbem to ac quire land, and by giving, tbem some sort "of Home Rale. Tbe bitter opponents are the followers of tbe tinseled Beaconsfield, w bo are bis lackeys, as be is tbe lackey of Ihe-Queen. Lord Beaconsfield has no vym palby with free institutions, as tbe English speaking races understand and establish tbem. If bo dared, be would treat Ireland and the Irish as be treated tbe Zulus and treats tbe Afghans. Tbe Irish people, how ever, can be confident tbat, if they siaud firm, Lord Beaconsfleld will give wuy." PHAGE IN NKHf YOU It. Good news comes from New York. The factions are becoming reconciled, and John Kelly is at last placated. The excellent New York correspon dent of the Philadelphia Ledger, in his letter of the 5th, says: John KelJy and the Tammany Hall fac tion have informally committed Ihetnselvi-s t ihe support of whoever may be nomi nated by the National Convention. , As Mirances to that effect have, within the few days past, beet given to prominent Dem ocratic leaders from other States,; who have come here expressly with a view of bridg ing about a pacification between Tammany ami '.be Til den faction. I have reason lo believe tbat a double leaded announce ment to this t fleet will appear, in the course uf a day or two, in Mr. Kelly's newspaper Oman." The same correspondent says this is very favorable to Tilden's nomina tion. Not necessarily. The Dem ocrats of the country are not com pelled to take Tilden because Tam many is pacified. If it can stand Tilden it could stand Seymour or Bayard better. We do not believe for a moment that Tilden can force himself upon the country. If nomi nated at all it will be because the South so elects, and not because he - m VOL. XI. assumes the air of dictator. This is no time for any flourishes of that sort among Democrats. Thay are fighting Imperialism and will not brook for a moment any one who assumes the attitude of party despot. "Them's our sentiments. i But it is probable that Mr. Tilden is much misrepresented as' to his par-poses.- He may not bave any desire or intention to undertake to either dictate to the party jor to force him self upon it. His enemies have done him injustice often, aud perhaps letter-writers have blundered through ignorance. That he would like to be nominated is certain. That he will bolt the party nomination if some one else is chosen, we do not believe. In fact, quite recently he has been repre sented in the Ne w. York Sun as say ing: "For my part, I will do everything I can to secure tbe election of the man who may be agreed upon by the opponents of the third term conspiracy as tbe best candidate to unite the conservative elements of all phies. If a third ternkrean -he conferred upon Grant, a fourth and fifth will be. la sbort,Urant'a ipstalllnenl lb Ihe White House in 188Lmeaas the Empire If he sticks to that he will give Sey mour or Bayard, or possibly some other sound Democrat and patriot, a hearty support. I IN Dl AN JDTB and COTTON STALK. We notice in our exchanges a let tor from Prof. Watterhouse, of Washington University, St. Louis, in which he expresses an unshaken con fidence that Indian Jute can be suc cessfully and profitably cultivated in the South. He saysi "My observations in India convince me tbat there are in the South large areas well adapted to the culture of this plant. When once experiment baa ascertained the con ditions favorable to its growth, a new source of great textile wealth will be opened to the South. I have no! fear that Ameri can genius will not be able to devise some rapid and: economical process frr disin tegrating the fiber. Tbe enormous Fortune which will award success. will soon stimu late our ioveotors to an f effective solution of the problem. 1 "It ia oar first duty to prove by actual trial that Indian Jute can be cheaply grown iu tbe Southern Stales. Then it is probable that! American ingenuity, excited by the hope which aucccBa wonbl convert into an assurance of wealth, will soou discover an economical and speedy means of separating tbe fibre." , j We note this for a two-fold reason. First, because it concerns the South. We would like to see the experiment fully tested as to Indian Jute, be cause 'it may give a new industry to our people, and cause the most grati fying results. Second, because there is another production, already widely cultivated throughout the South, that may yet prove! a source of wealth, and give another form of in dustry to our people.' It is. altogether probable that the bark of the cotton stalks will be utilised hereafter in a way never dreamed' of in our agricultural philosophy. We understand that some experiments have been made already with the cot ton bark, and with the most favora ble results. The fibres obtained are very long and very strong, and the, probabilities are favorable that the South possesses a new and endless source of wealth in this hitherto neg lected substance. We are not suffi ciently informed to write intelligent ly about the experiments which are being made in New Jersey. All we know is that a gentleman who has beetf experimenting with the bark is delighted with the iresfilts tbosxfar obtained. The prospect is, as we un derstand it, that the bags in which cotton is packed can will.be made from the be made, and bark of stalks upon which the cotton is grown. We shall have occasion no doubt to refer to this subject again. ( It is now hinted very broadly that Gov. Cobb was. lookjng, tq his own interests somewhat when he appont ed M r. Luke Pryor, of, Athens, Ala bama, to fill the late Senator Hous ton's unexpired terftv HftTaTlawyer of ability and character, and hot a politician. Here is what V "shrewd Alabama politician" told the Wash lngton. correspondent of . the Balti more San be Core Mr. Pryor was ap pointed, prophecyihg, ; however, that ho would be appointed. Said he: Qov. Cobb is anxious to-be re-elected, and to appoint either Gen.! Walker, Gea. Wheeler, Mr, Pugb, Mr. Bradford or 3en. Forney, all of whom: were named , when Gov.' Houston was elected and all of whom will be aspirants when tbe election shall , occur in November wjl&3itoxtve the appointee- indue ; advantage,) aid tamake unfriendly to Gov;': Cobb raft the dbeir aspi rants. It is assumed io th calculation of Mr. Fjror'a appointment tUai..h ; will he satiafled with his f ewjaanjhsenjire of the Senatorial toga, and will 9Qt aspire to fur ther ; political honors. .His appointment would therefore give no offence to the lead ing aspirant8U whom the fieid for the Sen atorshir would sdl toa left peo'."- - ' . In AlabamaHt is as elsewhere; the politicians take all the' Qhaacea. and have an eye to self." ! Weekly WILMINGTON, N. C, FRIDAY, ' JANUARY 16,.188Q. JBRtlGHATION AND COTTON 0111.1.8. Whilst all kinds of emigrants are not to be sought after, the South would be wise to make uncommon efforts to attract that class of dili gent laborers who are skilled in the various branches of industry,- and who have some capital oapital enough to buy small farms or engage in other kinds of business in a limited way. In other words, the South is concerned at present more in the quality than it is in the number of the emigrants who may find a home in our section. We believe that the time is not distant when skilled ope ratives in cotton manufacturing will be in demand in the South, and will be sought after by capitalists. There is no denying the fact that an uncommon interest has been awakened in many sections of the South in regard to cotton manufac turing. The papers tormonths have been discussing the question, and the Inierest is unabated.' We liikve had inqch to say ourselves about thllf 'im portant branch of ioauitry, and w 4 purpose to consider it further from tiqie to time. We are not yet satis fied as to what is the real value of the Clement Attachment. We are await ing thorough tests of it in Georgia where the manufacturing of cotton into yarns and fabrics is carried on with larger results and on a more ex tended scale than elsewhere In the. South. The Memphis Appeal, like the Stab, takes a hopeful view of the future of cotton manufacturing in the South. We hope before another deCade that it will be" found wise and profitable to7 manufacture the cotton where it is raised rather than to ship it thousands of miles to be converted into fabrics. The Appeal jb: Our people will be great andprosperous as soon as they retain their .cotton and manufacture it into cloth without the trouble and expense of baling it. If the South would manufacture all tbe cotton she raises she would be tbe gainer in the proportion which the gross sale of tbe manufacture l article exceeds tbat paid out for 'the raw material. The millions .thus saved' to the South would be a contribu tion to the wealth of the South. Every dollar retained in the South, where the cotton is raised, by manufacturing the raw material i .to cotton goods, is a pecuniary gain to that extent. For tbe South to plant mills m every town, city and neigh borhood, indeed right in tbe midst of ber coltbn fields, is the true policy to pursue. Cotton can be manufactured at less cost in the South,- where it is produced, and where' the climate is' genial all tbe year round; than in any other country ou the habitable' globe." We indorse this view heartily. It is common sense, and it is the truth. When we see New England or Old England writers trying to make it appear that the South is not the place for manufacturing, we are com pelled to . believe that they are con trolled by selfish and . sophistical views. It is known to all who know anything about it thatNew England's prosperity is based upon ber manu factures. It is known . furthermore that England has grown rich and prosperous and to a considerable ex tent through her very extensive cot ton 'mills. If she can make -cotton manufacturing profitable after trans porting the raw material thousands oi miles, then there is no reason what ever why it cannot be made more profitable in manufacturing it on the spot where it is grown. The Appeal says and with force: "The argument, that it is more profitable to employ all our forces in producing tbe raw material is no longer the potent one tbat it was in the days ot .slavery, but we shall find it much more to our interests to diversify our industries so as to give em ployment to all our people, even down to the women and children, aad make availa ble not only their physical energies, but laeir s&iu ana imetttgertcev - - - One other remark: if English cap italists could be induced to visit the South and see for themselves, wo be lieve that hundreds of them -would build faotories all over our favored section. We hope Mr. Sala will have his attention specially directed to this point when he enters upon his four months' tour in the Southern States. He can aid the South no little if he will post himself thoroughly and write up the advantages offered by the South as a great' field for cotton manufacturing. But his English pre judices, or the interests of his own people, may prevent him from enter ing upon such a discussion-. If Eng lish capitalists were informed of tbe exact facts it would not be long be fore many of them would be found erecting mills in the South. There are not a dozen known third, termers in Congresl -.' But if Grant is nominated the . Stalwarts will go him, epaulettes and all, as sure as ballot-stuffing begins. A Radical , paper has . j ast' been, started in Springfield, Illinois, with the appropriate name of Stalwart. ' MORE CONCERNING THB CACtAL .PROJECT. We are quite in earnest when we Urge the construction of the proposed Duplin Canal. It is an enterprise of real "pith and moment" to our. city, and if ever built Will prove of great advantage we cannot doubt. - If fuch a project were needed for one of ' the go-ahead Northern towns to secure 1 the trade of all or a large part df five productive counties its construction would not be delayed a day.7 ?We hope the business, enterprising- taeu of Wilmington will not allow thia really Important scheme to failr jThe friends and promoters ofHhe Duplin Canal have ever claimed thai' the enterprise could be carried oiltat a very small eoet, from the fact thinV there would be neither looks not Hbw paths required, which, in a fea measure, go to make up the principal cost in constructing canals. - : There is another consideration!' as i . ' ..- its construction, that will belap-' prjeciated- feadily- b,Hhsewhqn'T derataad such works. cayatmg an tne usual way, tbe greater portion of the earth can be removed by a process known as sluicing. That this process is practicable is not doubted by those who have paid at? tention to canal construction. It tan flattering to the friends of the en terprise tbat this 'plan of engineering' receives the indorsement of M. de Lesseps, Chief Engineer, and Mr. Dircks, the famous Amsterdam En gineer, who propose to use this identical sluicing process in the con struction of the Panama Canal. But what is better still than even this high authority, is practical data showing that numbers of canals have already been constructed by the sluicing process.' For instance-: The gold miners of California, with no other appliances than thoir axes, spades and shovels, blockade and sluice rivers round by new channels; and dig gold in , the bed of the old rivers, and use the new- streams or channels for washing out the hill and mountain gulches. But nowhere out side of China has this sluicing pro cess been reduced to such a scientific system as in Colorado. In this State, for supplying towns with water and for irrigating, lands, canals are sluiced out! at a nominal cost. At present there are over 400 miles of "canals in this State. The cheapness of these cartals is wonderfnL The Western Colony Canal, at Evans, Colorado, is forty miles long, andj cost only $23,650. This canal irrigates 115,200 acres of land, be sides supplying towns with water. Table Mountain Canal is twenty miles long, and cost only $8,000. The Chinese excel all other nations upon the globe in mechanical skill and economy in constructing their public works. The Grand Imperial Canal is 900 miles long,' and was construct ed bv the sluicing process. The highest head of 'water that could be used at any point upon the canal was only twelve feet, and yet the canal was sluiced out to a depth of sixty feet below tide level, and with a width of over 300 feet. In this work the water supply was great. The terminus of the Duplin Canal will be' at the junction of the North East river and Goshen. At this point! the supply of water will be unlim ited, and for a large portion of the year, if thrown into a cube. With a flow of two miles per hour, the vol ume would be 12 feet deep and 140 feet wide. This, is abundantly ample if thrown into a straight canal to sluice out' a channel below tide level, whieh would make the canal perpet ually navigable. Of course the water would have to be judiciously manipu lated, as is done in Colorado and other places. We have gone into this subject of sluicing, that our citizens may know something of the process adopted in other portions of the world in con structing canals when the require ments of commerce or the necessities of communities demanded it. The (Duplin Canal is not only' feasible but it should be built at the earliest pos sible day. . There is a ladies'- memorial before Congress demanding the expulsion of George Q. Cannon, now serving his fourth term ihs a- delegate from Utah in Congress. George is very "much married," having a half dozen or more wives, so-called. He is a strong ad-' vocateof jJolygamy and practices it- ,to the best of his abilitV. - Let Con gross unload.' Shoot off -this mighty Mormon Cannon. Bt a n THE DEATH PENALTY! Execution of Allea OlatbU rer lb . f ' .1, - -' ..... Mtfrder of Jtonbta JHrf togFall . Particulars of be Hanglas-CoD tktati of iu aiemn4 Iirian. Yesterday Allen Mathis, colored who wis convicted at the December term of the Suoerior Court of New Hanover county of the murder of oae Reuben Hfcrringl col f , near Burgaw, Pender county, id. Sep tember, 1878, and whose cape was removed frim Pender to New JHsnover, expiated hta frinte on the'iaidws in, Hhis city. he trial of athisoaoe up on Wedn.es- pt the term, and the prisoner, was ably ended by Messrs. Edwin T. Boykin, of Sampson, - and Bruce" Williams and 3.! T. Blaid, of " Pender; the : pbse- oution being conddcted by Captain Swift galloway. The evidence showed a state of feeding between the parties, superin dujeed by criminal inUtnacy previously ex isting between Allen Mathis and Lucy Her rlrJg, the lfe of the murdered man1: This ufmlnated, fiailly, inthe murder for which HitbifStod chfirftEfd., The case wagiven lJ,Q the jury the same evenmfc god in a short time they returned aterdict of guilty.Whef c upbn hisHonor.udge Eure, sentenced tbe prisoner to be hanged on Friday, the 9th of January, between the hours of 11 and 2 o'clock. Some of tbe ministering brethren, together with Jailor Howard, remained with him unp a late hour Thursday night. Yester day morning he stated to the jailor that be spent tbe remainder of the night very com fortably; that he felt of a surety that the iliord bad pardoned him, and that he was ready .and willing to die. He ate for bis breakfast a biscuit and a piece of fried fish, and drank a cup of coSee, and seemed more cheerful his last morning than he had since his conviction. Rev. C. O. Brady, Episcopal; Rev. J. G. Fry, Methodist; Rev. U. ; W. Price, Methodist; Rev. D. G. Sanders, Presbyterian; Rev. Cornelius Sampson, Methodist; and Revs. Conway and Morton, Baptists, of the colored minis ters, and Rev. J. P. King, Baptist, white, visited 'him during the morning and re mained with him, singing and praying, un til ihe last moment. '. For the past two or three weeks different ministers of the city have been in daily at tendance upon the doomed man in his. prison cell, endeavoring to bring him to a sincere repentance of his aina, and espe cially of the grievous one for which he was so soon to suffer. He appeared anxious to experience relief from tbe heavy burden ot condemnation that weighed down his soul, bat it was not until a few hours before his execution that he was able to say that all was well with him. Notwithstanding the fact that tbe execu tion was to be strictly private, about two thousand persons, principally colored, as sembled on Fourth and Princess streets, in the vicinity of tbe jail, many of them standing there for two hours or more, eagerly waiting and watching to"- get a glimpse of tbe condemned man as he was taken from the sidedoor of the prison to the scaffold. During this time a colored woman got to , shouting yery. lustily... and created considerable .excitement .among tbe colored people. Many of the latter class of the population were loud in their condem nation of the privacy attending the execu tion, whilst others were noising it around that those who went in bad to payAtwenty- five cents for a ticket of admission At 11 A. M. the persons provided with tickets were admitted to the jail-enclosure, and: nearly all of tbem proceeded at once to inspect the gallows. This was erected immediately in the rear of tbe jail, kod was so enclosed that only those inside and upon the platform could witness the execution. The enclosure was about fifteen by twelve feet and the platform was reached by i flight of steps. - In the centre of tuts plat form was a trao .door four feet souare. wording, upon hinges, and. when closed rest ing bppjo a wooden bolt which was with drawn' by working" a lever at . the bead of me uigui oi siaus. ine oaeriu anu nis as sistanta arranged the rope a half-inch new manillt, well lubricated 30 as to give tbe condemned man a fall of eight feet. At 12 o'clock Mathis was brought out of .the jail and mounted the steps to the plat form, attended by the jailor and the colored ministers who had been with him' all the morning. He was a bright, intelligent looking young negro, brown-ia color, and apparently about. 80 years of age. His arms were tied and he was dressed in jacket and panta of brown jeans, which were new and apparently provided for the occasion; but he was bare-headed and his ehoeswere old and worn. He mouated the steps Quietly and without assistance, but when he reached the' platform and saw the preparations made for his death, his color seemed to turn a shade lighter, to a ghastly asbyhue, and his agitated and tremulous manner betrayed bis deep emotion. He took ; his position upon the trap, and the Sheriff in a firm voice ,read the finding of the Court and the certificate of the clerk. Mathis was then asked by Sheriff Manning if he bad anything to say. He responded that be had told the truth about the mat ter, and that he felt that, he had made his peace with his God. With closed eyes he continued to repeat "God paje mercy upon me," while a hymn was sung, beginning "There is a fount. After the hymn, prayer wa3 offered by-Rev. J. G. "Fry, one. of he colored ministers, the prisoner kneeling, and with closed eyes contfauAlly repeating "Lord havemeej&.'t.; L; After the .completion of the prayer Mathis arose from his Kneeling position and said: "I am much Obliged to air the ministers. have nothing against anybody." A prayer NO., 12. was then read by Rev. C. O. Brady, of St. Mark's Episcopal church, at tbe conclusion of which the ministers all . advanced and shook' hands with Mathis, bidding him good-bye. He said that he was much obliged to them for what they had done for him.and asked them to sing "I want to hear sweet singing when I die," saidjbe. The sing- uyi ujuiuo naa wcu ccauuieu. .LUljug iia continuance the Sheriff advanced, adjusted the straps upon the prisoner's limbs, and shaking hands with Mathis bade him fare- nl 1 TIT At- .a m . . a ,wf". jitaiuis responaea lome csnenn wan firm voice, bidding him good-bye, and aaing uiathe bad nothing against him. lit also shook bands with the jailor and thanked htm for bis kind treatment. As the Sheriff adjusted the blackcap over Ma this' head and then the fatal noose, the hands of the prisoner trembled violently, and it was evident that only by a strong ef fort was he able to control himself. At twenty minutes past 12 o'clock the Sheriff pulled the lever, the- wooden bolt flew back, the trap dropped, and Mathis body fell with a loud thud and spun around in the air. There was but slight motion of the body, merely! a muscular contraction and a tremulous movement of the extremi- i - - ties, which lasted a few moments, then all was still and tbe corpse dangled idly m the ajil ':".' v.. '1 Vi...,,J- ''i . After hanging ten minutes ibe body was examined by Drs. Walker and Lane. The pulse was stilled, but a faint motion of the heart was thought to be perceptible. Two minutes afterwards, however, 'Mathis was pronounced dead, tbe rope was cut and the body lowered into the coffin. His neck was broken by the fall, although the hang man's knot had slipped from under the left ear around to the back of the neck. The Sheriff's arrangements were very complete. There were admitted inside of the jail yard about forty or fifty persons, exclusive of the guard. Shortly after the body had been placed in the coffin the remains were put in a wagon and taken to the "Potter's Field," just outside the southern limits of the city. Tbe following confession was made to Deputy Sheriffs Daniel Howard and T. C. Miller, and taken down at the time by Rev. C. O. Brady, one of the ministers in attend ance: " . - : "I was intimate with Lucy .Herring about; four years: Last December, two yearffago, I was arrested, charged with criminal inti macy with Lucy Herring. There was no bad-feeling between myself and Reuben Herring, deceased. Reuben Herring had abandoned Lucy about the time that I. first became intimate with her. Lucy came to my house with Tom Hayes on a Sunday,, the very day of the mur der. Tom Hayes wrote a letter for her ahd left. Tom Hayes had left about three or four minutes when I came out on the piazza and discovered a man in the bushes, I went back in tbe house and got a gun and walked out in tbe field. 1 told him not to come to me. He came up cursing and swearing, and drew back his stick and struck at me. I fended the blow off with the gun, walking backwards until 1 got a chance to run,-and he ran after me. I ran into tbe house and threwhe gun down; then grabbed an axe and struck him with it about tbe hip the first blow; he advanced on me and I struck him about tbe bead as he was coming up to mei As I dealt him tbe third blow be fell to the ground. I let him lie there about fifteen minutes, and then he was about dead. I took him up then and buried him in the well, and Lucy said, "Let's hide him, and if you will not tell it 1 will not do it." And then I said, "Well, if you don't I will not;" and then she went home and came back and prevailed upon me if I would never tell it she; would not. 1 saw ber several times at terwards, and she would tell me to "Keep it! Keep it!" About five weeks afterwards I saw ber. and she said to me tbat they were going to arrest her about it, and asked me what to do about it. 1 1 told her I did not know; and then she jaid, "If they do I'll tell tbem that he is gone away," and then I told ber tbat 1 would go off and get a letter written and make out like he had gone away, and shs said, "All right !" and told me to write the letter back to her and she would ta&e it and- show it; and then went over South river and got a letter written back to her is the name of Reuben Herring by alt. J, Melvin. This is tbe only crime I ever bave committed. "I was raised at John Mathis', on Little Coharie, in Sampson county. My mother and! father are dead. I have one sister living. She is in Sampson-county. formerly belonged ta John Mathis; be raised me. 1 am a cooper by trade." This is the first execution that has taken place in this city since February 28th, 1868, when -William Wright Parker was hanged for the murder of William Childress in 1863 A Wbale! A Wbale!!' The Charleston News and Courier reports tbe capture of a whale in the harbor there on the 7th inst., after a long and exciting chase, in which five steam tugs and fifty or sixty row boats engaged. At the finisb;the Newt and Courier says: "At last a bare footed sailor in one of tbe two first boats, the man who struck the first blow in the morning (Garrison, of North Carolina, drove his lance home. The boat backed away, but there was no need for it An in ert tijack mass lay upon the surface.moving gently with tbe motion of the water. Dead at lait? The tug Royal Arch, familiarly known in our waters, led the attaok. "The fish is a 'Right whale,' As well as could he esiimaieu nis leugiu is irom lony 10 uiiy feet, and the thickness of his body from ten to fifteen feet. His weight, of course, could not be ascertained, but his captors estimate that be will yield from $600 to $800 worth of oil.': i " Xfce mystery Solved Tlie Body Found. The body of Samuel Davis, the colored man Whose mysterious disappearance was alluded to in the Stab on more than one occasion during the past week, was found about twelve or fifteen miles up the North East river, oq Wednesday evening last, by Mr. T. B. Burnett. Mr. Burnett arrived Jiere Thursday night and reported the cir cumstance to Coroner Hewlett, who dis patched some men up the riveryesterdayto bring; the remains to this city, where they were expected to arrive last night,his inten tion being to hold'an inquest over the body this- morning. . Mr. Burnett reports that there were no indications' of violence about the body, so far as he could see. The burglars are on their rounds at Charlotte. s comptrndB ( wiiMja. sr. fs wtttf itlfaor SoatboTif fide a Cotton ftblpptns Port. The following communication shows that Wilmington is. not behind her sister cities in facilities for doing a cotton trade of large dimensions.' -Mr YanBuaktilWn ia President of the Chamber of - Commerce. and, while not engaged in col ton business, takes great interest in what .tends toward the prosperity of this city: . '.Editor . Morning StarMv attontinn has been drawn to the following cation which appeared ia the columns of me oavannan morrang jsem of January 6th, aud as it appears to be wb&'t is con sidered good work for that city, which is making rapid strides ia the way of com mercial importance, as well as overad vances toward prosperity, I think it will not be amiss to comoare the frt win. similar business being done by ihe coUbu presses ana stevedores or mis city, and show that the moderate business now done nere in cotton is done well and will no doubt inCreasegreally: . (From the Savannah News. EXCELLENT STEVEDORING FINE CARGOES. Ediior Mornina News: The desire to express their approbation and com- menaauoa or ine clever stevedores, Messrs. Bergman & Steele, who stowed their vessels with larger cargoes than, they carried from Galveston and Charleston on several occa- sions.and also to near testimony to the great facilities of your - port for -compressing cotton. Let the folio win e show The Norwegian harnne 1Vlpmfii r.urari yesterday with 2,230 bales of upland cotton. wciguwg i,uo,?oo pounas, being lul.UOO nounds more than oho. pver mrrini i Charleston or Galveston on previous voy agesan average oi pounds to tbe ton. ine Norwegian Darque Air cleared on Saturday last, with a careo of 1.164 hiw cotton, weighing 556,000 pounds, cargo ty t3.;aiuttto, jiusq., Deing ii Dales more than she carried. from Galveston on two previous occasions. The tonnage of the vessel is 298 tons net; Such cargoes speak well for these sWvedores-and your port. , , . l. iJERJJSTEN, Master barque Telemach. A. Johnsen, Master barque Ali. During the oresent cotton vp.ar Ihsrp have been cleared from this port, to date. nineteen cargoes or cotton lor foreign port?.. Of these ten "were of afferreeate torninc 4 247 tons, and carried 17.736 hales 8,387,655 pounds.being an average of 1,952 pounds average of the two cargoes loaded at Savannah, and of 1.670 noun da that Ramp vessels loaded at Charleston and Galves ton. The two cargoes loaded atASnvannnli show 1,865 and 1,812 pounds to the ton; tbe ten cargoes loaded at Wilmington show 1,849, 1,865, 1,894, 1,947, 1,963, 1,970, 2,002, 2,036, 2,041 and 2,071 pounds to the ion., ine increase in the aggregate is sev enteen rter cent, over nhnrlnRtnn nnH Dal. yeston, and seven percent, over Savannah. comparing two ot the cargoes from Wil mington with the two from Savannah, we have, a bark of 318 tons taking 649,035 pounds.and another of 308 tons taking 638", 033 pounds, being an average of 2,053 pounds to the ton, showing an increase of twpnty-three per cent, over Charleston and Galveston, and twelve per cent, over Sa vannah. The ten vessels loaded at Wilmington average 425 tons; tbe two loaded at Savan nah, average 450 tons, which makes this comparison fair, as vessels of large tonnage will carry more per ton than those of me dium or small tonnage. Wilmington can boast of three first-class cotton compresses; also stevedores capable of doing .work equal to that done at any other port. The increasing depth of water over the bar will no doubt enable vessels of large draft to visit this port, when we hope to gain what we shall endeavor to merit, a large increase of commerce and a share of the prosperity that awaitsthe South, and will come if her people put their- hearts and hands rightly tosworhv .' . . ' i . A. H. VanBokkelen.- A Reminder. - . .. - Merchants and other business people are reminded of tbe fact that the State and town require tbem to return to the Register of Deeds within ten days after the first day of January, 1880, a true and exact state ment of the amount of purchases made by them as principal or agents, or through agents or commission merchants, for-the six months ending tbe 31st day of Decem ber, 1879. Tbe amount of purchases, both . in and out of the State, must be included in the returns. Exaggeration In Figure. As a fair example of the cariosity of statistics, says Spoflord, the Con gressional librarian, "take the army of Xerxes when it crossed the Helles pont to invade Greece. Herodotus gives it as 1,700,000 fooi, 100,000 horse, and 517,000 naval forces , total, 2,317,000; and adds that this was swollen by the attendants to 5,200,000; and all this to invade a country which in no ags known to history contained over 1,500,000 in habitants. Another favorite myth of historians is the story of that famous Alexandrian library of 700,000 vol umes, burned by the Caliph , Omar, A. D. 640, with a rhetorical-dilemma in his mouth. Unfortunately for this highly dramatic tale no , two writers are agreed as to the circumstances, except as to the single fact that there was a library at Alexandria, and that it ceased to exist in the seventh cen tury. To aslc a modern inquirer to be lieve that 700,060 books were ga thered in one body of 800 years be fore the invention of printing, while the largest library in the world, four centuries after the multiplication of books by printing began, contained less'than 200,000 volumes,, is altoge ther too great a stretch of credulity. Even reporting the size of modern li braries, exaggeration holds sway. The library of George IV., inherited by that graceless ignoramus from a book collecting f ather,and presented to the British nation with ostentatious libe rality only after he had failed to sell it to Russia, was said in the publica tion of the time to contain about 120, 000 volumes.; But an actual enume ration when the books were lodged in the King's Library,' at the British Museum, where they have ever since remained,8howed that there were only 65,250 volumes, being little more than half the reported, number. Many librarie8,private and public, aie equal ly overestimated. - The New York World corres pondent, who has been studying party politics at Washington. and through out the country, finds the impression growing that Mr. Tilden, abandoning the expectation of : nominating him self, has resolved to defeat: Bayard at all hazards, f Mr. Tilden may find it to his interest some of these days to attend to his own business. &l. Louis Post, Dem.