J - ' ' The Weekly Star: PUBLISHED AT ilm i no ton - AT c if Y El B, IHiADTAHCE. ggggggS388SSS SSSS8SSSSSSSSSS83 sssssss ;t-t-iiooiaooegQ'o t"!: Pi SI: S 83SSS3S888S8S8883 88888888288888888 iIUUK I 3888SSSS8S8SSSSSS Z ft -srH 8888888888888888- OQ r Entered at the Post Office atWumington, K. C, . as Second Class .Matter. -' subscription PRICE, r The subscri6tion price of the Weekly Stak is as follows ; ? . Single Copy 1 year, postage paid, $1.50 " 6 months. " l.UU 6 months, . $ months, .50 A QUESTION, OP GBOWINO POPU , ' lAB IirtBBEST. --.. f Col. Fremont put the matter corf rectly before the Tariff Commission i,a etfltwl that "the vomtlar side V UCil uv; 'vwv A J- ' of the question was a tariff for reve nue with incidental protection;'?."'' -By. popular side "he- meant of. -course. the side on which the people are and by a large majority. The tariff i is just one of those questions tbat,,the peo1 pie have not concerned themselves about until- recently and, why?, The answer is, that although the Southern people we're, paying annually more than a hundred million dollars to the Gt-iu'i al Government in the way of taxes that the great mass of them, 'did not kiKw it Not being political economists when they went Jto the store to purchase any of : the neces-r saries of life and found them double in prioe they did not pursue the cause of this, luit, as when there is a short crop of wheat , or oats, they con cluded that there was a scarcity of the articles land that :inale. them high. : They did not enter into the question of monopoly and high tax or dutios and did nrkt. lrnnw t.liatt.ViA renl cause of the .greafc'increase in prices was legislation that fostered the inter ests of tbetvery-f ew-at t&&afcSer . thA vcrv man v Tsntwioh- ia t.liA fant The- present war tariff has entailed i n onn.-l Inv rP lnnof (l RA ff every Iiouseholder whose r expenses amount to $800. , This - is putting it very moderately. It would be nearer, the murk w think to; put the figures at -jcH. Tiatisto sayr every hOuse-i holder iarJ North ;' paroliha; who -ex-; p.'iids 600 yearly rould vbe able to purchase the same articles for f 450,' if the reseiit war'tariff wa reduced to a basis of revenue strictly. . Your shoes or dress or - hat, or pants-that cost 4.50 now could; be...-bought for 3, and so on with household articles generally. " . : ' t Tl. ..... illif f.ViV TV.'. ,. iuc true piauunu lur ukj uemo': crats to stand on is a tariffs for reve- i-iiue with such incidental protection s -will be afforded by it.. tariff or revenue strictly will give as great protection to I American, industries as- pey ought tdhave ? unless the r im- moral idea is to prevail without limi tation that : it is altogether fair and . inst r and honest to take from the pockets of ;the ' peo ple their hard-earned dollafk to put tnem in the Ipockets of the monopo-? lists who are' growing richer 'With: each revolviiig day. -A tariff for re-' L venue is thd true basis "for A because - it is less oppressive by a hundred million dollars t than the present tariff is. ; It is the tariff for' the people s )of the; XJnited States at prewSfaQfanilti U wm .trire v and just the theory of free trade between all nations il is not practicable for. us at the present stage of the world ; and because (of the; fact mainly that all nations do not practice it;;' -The tariff is a modern invention compVra; tively. Thej Carthaginians ' had 'a sort of tariff; but it was levied, upon tueir own neODle- and- not ;upon foreign nations. That is'; to is ; to say, a prosperous seafaring man had to pay- much, toil- to his - 'own -go vernment. ' The ' modern; idea does Dot differ an vrv -Tni-inli' oVtn. . oil . The , American - 4dea the Radical ideais to make i home folks take care of all industries not able to take care of themselves of, being forced l pay an apnual tax: to the- owners of these ipdustriesJ "But of all ancient peoples we rdo remember :to haver read of -.but ne nation that levied a t.aV' nr Aritr. 1 and tKo -'V'"v? im was the Carthagmian. -r .lt as strictly free trade. "All pe6pi?8I at Vol, xiii. were allowed to trade just where they found it most profitable to do, so, and no industry was fostered for the very few at t the expense of the: veiy many. . ' , ,' : ; But all this is ' changed now, and no modern nation pretends to carry on government upon a free trade ba sis. - England has a fair trade basis. That is to say, most articles are free of duty. She raises about ' half of the amount raised ; by the American war tariff,1 and does it upon some twelve orifourteen articles. ..Under our present oppressive system there is a tax to be paid by , the. , consumers at home upon some twothoJistfniar-. ticles:- T .r '.: ' Kt " ; So we repeat, the true platform of the Democracy is- a tariff for revenue with incidental protection. ; This will have three most Jmportant results r f r First, i it willi reduce i the i present tariff receipts .f romfif ty to one hun dred million . dollars. Everybody oaght o know that the present tariff, was. levied; during' the war. r The author of it, Senator s Morrill, stated in the Senate that it was intended, to meet a then pressing necessity, and was for a temporary use only, and stilljifter twenty yeas, it lis' in full flower--more unjust now than it was twenty years ago, because it js really higher. A tariff for revenue would readjust this war tax, that is so need lessly burdensome and unequal. - -Second, it will cause nearly every necessary of lifeHo so fall in price as to relieve every householder in . the land. . . ...,--' . . v. : ., ;i ' ' Third, it ; will " prevent the forma tion of a' new party. There is a grow ing sentiment in- the great Northwest as there is in the South among mtel- I ligent, reading people that a high war I tariff is not 'the thinff needed by the I industries of the. country in a time ii piuiuauv., uvx u wx . . der tne tarin are unequal, lniquiious and i oppreSsiveJ If one of the two great parties do not moye in the mat-; ter of a speedy and severe readjusting ncl reduction of ;twar;taLrlhete rpoirk into! the next can it will neither be weak nor inactive. The idea of ; a- heavy reduction of taxes will be prominent ia the cam paign 'of, 1884. 1 '.,.,',.;.; .. ;i?f J ; . The Tariff Commission", will not amount to anything and, because at catches only the expression of the in-; terested few mainly. : Those j whoj have large pecuniary interests at stake J are neara, wnnsi ineiaimiui iuuuuus 1 of tax-payers are quiescent The time will come when the people will rise ' up mttheir grandeur. and might and mane tne law-masers equalize ana re- 1 duce the taxes that rob them annual- I ly of at least one hunarea ana nity ; l J , 1 . .. . ' I mi I nn do an aU told, lt IS not free trade, : needed. but i air trade that is a uc uru uviincn iww vx mc vmmu . i paign in South 1 Carolina occurred at;J Jjancascer. oucn occurreuces ire w , 1 K .nrorcW VIoTat Arl and it. itt t.n ...... f. . - - 1 arise, , Bad whiskey and . bad bipod I are the occasion : of a great deal f jl stnfe and , bloodshed. Tne, twtnte jl beople cannot be too careful and they 1 1 should forbear lislong as possible be fore t the y.i. allow iithemselves-to be l t .i r drawn into- a 1 "difficulty; with the f ne ffroes, , tThev ' have .so ; very- much more", to lose", in, a '.struggle of this kind that generally prudence .will be j found the better part or vaior unaer , 0f, whiph have been stocked with with uer temptations. . to' . resentment.' . Ia the fman carp. - One of , his neighbors. Mr. Sam Lancaster nghtHhe negroes Were the Boon,' caught ;one a,fewys ago which aggressors -according to a .detailed; .account '': given I in the Charlotte F'C- tenoer .lc y-.yf.fWe rather think the Stab man has lost his list of Colonels and 'Eurnelsw or has got them pied. Exchange. - ' ' ;iThecampaign- rather mixed" them, i '.N ever mind, after November we wnistraignten.up ine iisi. xne "Hons."and 4Generals', and "Jedges" 1 and "Kurnels" will, be thick at Ra- leigh about the time the Scions meet. Four hundred "Red Shirts" assem- bled at Wmnsboro, ' S. ( ' to, giye McJjane Greenback, candidate for Governor, a rotten-egg' reception; B(e came next r day I and - hearing of the proposed reception did not stop" short of Charlotte in this v -State.: .Free speech ought not to be - interfered with... It is wrong. -The Star Route orean Wash- - 'yrrry:r.?y- Brewster "of beastly" " drunkenness." It is a beastly" charge if true) - ; WAV" , WILMINGTON; -N. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER -6, 1882. REGISTRATION. flegUtrar and Places of Beslstratlon. The County Commissioners yesterday re-, vised their list of . Registrars 'and Poli-hol--.ders for the .. November ' election. The f ol lowing embraces a list ofjke Registrars fbr the various precincts, and also the 'places for registration : . , , , t t t FIKST WABD. ' ' ,?irst Division T. Jt'Herring,' Registrar; at the xesidence of Mr. Herring," 90 Sixth1 , between Bladen and Harnett street. Second. Division-f TiJ". M.: Evans' Regis trar at the corner of. Fourth and JBejl Cross "streets.," " . t ? ' I . .. Third Diyisiou-J. p. Orreli -Registrai; . store southwestern " corner of Anderson (continuation of Ninth) and"Walnul streets. : ... eEcoKD ward. 1 y t-J.'?'Iiumsden Registrar;, at Ihe. store ciT .1 . L ninnnn rm h wint otroot .;.... jf , i TilLKD WAKD. . W. L.. Jacobs,. Registrar; at. the corner of 'Fourth and Princess streets, - ' f I, FOTTRTHjWABD. t , fj ;Fowler Registrar; at t the Ank. 'John Street Engine House . , r , . , . ) FIFTH WAKD. , , I First Division W. H. Bell, Registrar 5 at the Btore of W H, Bell, on Fifth, between Castle and Queen streets. f)l, j Second Division Jos. H, Hanby, Regis trar; at the store of J. H Hanby, corner of Eighth and Dock streets. . -. : . , , . j Cape Fear .Township Iredell Johnson, Registrar; at Mr. Johnson's residence. . . 1 Federal Point, Township-J. . H Horne, Registrar; at Mr. Home's residence. , . v Harnett Township J.' A.Macomber, Registrar; at Macomber's store.. lt, j Masonboro Township Jno. A. Farrow; Registrar; at Mr,. Farrow's residence. There will be an entirely new registration in the First and Fifth Wards, but hot ia other voting precincts. " " " 11 . m m m ' ' ' : The Cornel aa Viewed in1 Wilmington. m The comet seems to Jiaye made an un usually brilliant appearance yesterday morn ing. , , Early risers were in ecstacies over i Its position was a little south of east, ani one gentleman says it was so brighJC.that its shadow was cast upon the floor of his room. from an opening in. which he. was viewing ltcan be seen Tery, plainly and .tli. WwiiyWOT. fan.iike ia .appearancewpoiau ;southeas ward which is said to be an indication thai it is travelling in that direction., Our 1 - astronomer,, who is a close observer Of heavenly bodies, denies that the: present ,1s .the comet of lUWi&s: :A kf: Trt viva onmA iadiAtlon of thAhriorhtnAM morning, at abont f our o'clock, it is-sUteo that one gentleman t when he flrsl; caught, a glimpse of. the,viaUor, took it jto be a chim neyon fire..; , A sight ; of . it will well.repay any little,; inconvenience;. expenenceairom; rising earlier than -usual,- t, ; v t 1 Crop In Some ot. tke Eastern' Coun4 tie. . ' . '. ,.. . . i One of : ouf Wilmington" f riendsr who has travelled somewhat extensively. mlthe Eastern connUes "recently, ';' especially in. vjreene, Luuirauu v ucci crops looking so fine. Onf farmed who M uttll aoie u mae eoougu fi game acreage, sufficient to last him four years'. 'The" only drawback, now is the maianai iever, wnicn is Keepiug iue pujoi- .. 1 : s . A ciaD8 uusy miuewuuww Attempt to Tnrow.a Train Off a.Traelc. We learn that .an. attempt - was made on Fridav hieht to wreck the ' eastern bound j train on the Carolina Central itauroaa, ne-. tween Rockingham and Hamlet by placing- uuuiwi ui uu-u w . Innately it was a steep grade at that point krvtionf oo if crna nnlV rnnniruf wttn ffl..nt fnrrfiykt the'-time'forthe'bo- catcher to shove two or three of the ties off ; the track. Had the trat been going- tne other way the result might have been very disastrous. It is hoped tl guilty parties niay" be discovered and proper punishiheri meted out to them ! - 1 1T .Fliih Pondi and German Carp. . A correspondent writes us that there are , in thft extreme wfistern nortion of DuDlin county p0pe eight ,o?r ,ten; fish . ponds, some weighed six- pounds, .was . twenty-three inches long andmeasuredfourteen inches around the middle; and made a meal for fourteen persons. It was placed in hia pond w0 years ago last' March. " ' ' ?' ' Sllsbt lOistafce. , '.-yfl. U -Atjolored orator was -spouting in. one of the waros.on fEridaya night Jast, and at- -tempted to say that, ' twelve months agohe wasiiin the gtate .capitaV bu in(i cons- mience of the excitement of the moment he got confused .and blurted out the words, ."Fellpw-citizens; twelve mouths ago I was in the tate remtentiaryi'; , Sensation. .. J changed hands m this market yesterday; on a basis, oi fiufj cenis per pouna;xormio dhqg. . ,",. I jj rt&FICYrlfEWSTA&D ABLE." ; Yvnitevuie JCinierpnse. . The WUmington : Stab : comes to our -office, after itk -fifteenth birth day, which occurred on Saturday, as Dngm, spicy auur ituw ever. t iiu its columns rfilled with ; interesting matter, and With able -editorials, it is i a power, in . our ?-iate,.. anai snouic I meet' with the ' eneouragement an support of-good Democrats.-. , In our -inate, . and;, snouid and O UH FISJUXG IN TERESTS. UowFlih are XSntltfed into Snbma. - rlne Prisons and Seooped Out. ' Messrs. W. X. Davis & Son,' pioneers in thfrbusiness of reducing the matter of fish ing to a science along this , particular part of the coast, have lately had constructed a contrivance near what was formerly known as New-Inlet, by- .whichnsh'cah be cap tured by' wholesale and with ease. A kind of trap constructed of nets,:has been loca ted near the Inlet, east of Zeke's Island, running oft five' hundred yards from the beach into the ocean;- attached to the trap is a leader three "hundred and fifty feet long, extending the length ; of . the intervening space from the short, which . cuts oft the fish which ever wufe they" may be s wim- ming,-and as they generally make for deep water whenever they meet 1 with an ob-v struction in the more shoaly-places, and as the trap is located in "deep. water,'heyT na turally turn, 'and following the direction of the leader, swim directly into a' fceart shaped contrivance which serves as . an ante-room t6' the trap,' through an aperture on each side of the leader, and thence into the trap' itself, from whence very few" of the imprisoned fish ever find their way out Here they are pocketed, as it js termed, - by raising the centre of the trap,;Whlch throws them Into small- net compartments at jthe sides of the sub-marine prison, whence they are scooped out at will. . The trap is per fectly round.: and, with- its attachments; X kept in position and supported by twenty- Jive anchors, Weighing, fifty pounds each, and by pilings, to which the nets are at tached .by i lines.; Four sharpies ? ara emi ployed in : the: business, two in attending the nets and two in bringing i the r fih to markets The : fish-trapping i arrangement altogether cost about. i 2,500. and it ' takes $400 a month to fish it P r' 1 The trap, is entirely a Inew . enterprise in these parts; at least, nothing of the sort has , been attempted south of Cape Lookout, at which place there, are two located ; but they are quite numerous on the New England coast, "where,' the idea originated. Jt" is very likely that in time they'will entirely supersede the' small seines now so common ly us.." ' 1 ' :'; 1 .;, ;. 1 Markets for the fish so caught are found in. this 8tate; South Carolina.ahd Georgia; while not a few are shipped , to." the Norths ern cities, and as the demand is constantly increasing it is fair to, presume that the fa- jCflities ifor supplying it will -continue tp multiplyi:; -if C i ' ;f;-. '. " i f Vfi r :'- Bic Hani Of Plan mi WrtehtavUle. ' ' i A.ttMrl..yrai' :. Canwyslnsherytri mendoushaul o; valets ?as maae. Up. wards6f twelyeiWusatti of the . largest and finest kindif mfillets were taken front the seine, and. but. for the breaking of the; cork line, -which opened 'a way 5of escape for a great many, the fishermen Would have secured i some fifty or sixty barrels; more4 The twelve 9 thousaid, an bid fisherman says, wonld make about two hundred and fifty barrels of the size now used in packing mullets. &- . ' ' s ' ' 1 ' ) Mr, Canady had agents in thesity yester day buying up all the empty barrels iheyi could ;get. - 3 Capt, ; Manning, who was: pass-j ing in a boat, was called upon for assist-' ance in getting the seine to the . shore, and we, learn i that he, realized . the . handsome sum ; of $5 as; the share of himself and hands.. This is considered an extraordina ry haul for the location. i tj( I TwoDeathi. - Two well known citizens of Wilmington! died yesterday. Mr. James' G. ' Bradley,', after an . illness ot several weeks, died at 8.80 A M. ; and Mr. Charles E. Burr, who had " long been in declining health, passed away at 6.30 P, M." Both these gentlemen' were most . highly" respected and generally beloved, and will be . sadly missed in the respective circled in'; which "they moved.; The funeral of Mr." Bradley will take place from St." John's Church at 10.30 o'clock this morning. The tuneral of ' Mr. Burr takes place to-morrow morning, rat .-.40 o'clock -. i i T ' . '- v' Peraona ... ..,. Rev. Dr. Taylor returned home frona his trip Up the Carolina Central Railroad yes terday morning.1- He preached on Sunday j morning at Centre, Robeson county, and on - Sunday night, Tuesday tight ' and Wednesday nfght at Alma, Robeson coun ty; where Messrs! Wilkinson ' & Fore's ex tensive -milling establishment is located. Dr Taylor expresses" piniself . ;as- having been greatly pleased with his visit,, -?tr Foreign Shipment. , t viThe Norwegian barque Post, Capt : Hen riksen,!was cleared from this port for'Ant- werp, yesterday byMessrs." Alex.- Sprunt & Son, witi 1,000" casks spirits turpentine and 2,25Q'barrels rosin; "valued at $25,500; also, the Danish barque Mens, Capt Dahl, fdT Glasgow, Scotland, by Messrs. Alex. Sbrunt & ' Son; . with .4,500 barrels v rosin, valued at $7,800.' Total, valued of '. foreign exports for the day, $33,800, Acquitted., - , G. Buie" charged with the murder, pf ,E. Kemp, in Bladen county. r about ona-year ago, was tried at Columbus aupenor. uourt during the week just passed ; and acquitted. The case, which was removed from Bladen to Columbus for trial, was alluded tain the Star a few days ago.j - r -,;o A change of-schedule ' goes into effect on the Carolina Central' Railroad on Saturday next .the 80th inst,: The mail and passenger tiain-wffl leaveWilmlngton then at 5.45 P. M.; instead of o.3aK,Mrfnd ar- rive here at A.M.-' 9.50 ( A. M. .instead of 8.50 4 - AFYALLINQ DISASTER. - The SKlMlMlppt.iti-rer Steamer Ht; K. Iee Burned. Near Vlehourg-Total Deatrnctlon of the Boat" Terrible ; Xossof Iilft. .( )'' :-- CBy Telegraph to thVuornlne Star! -i i . New Obleaxs, September 30. A Pied,-' yum Yicksburg special says: " This morn ing, at 3 o'clock, a. fire broke out on the steamer R. K JLee while on her trip to this city, and Twhen about thirty miles below Vicksburg, iresulting in the total destruction of the boat and a terrible loss of life. - The f pllowing a -list, of ..the persons known to be lost: Cabin passengersr-Mr. Painter, of Maysvffle, Kentucky; , Mrs.; McLellan, of New Orleans; Miss Adams, music teacher, on her way to Baton' Rouge: also an infant of Mrs, iSearles,- of .Vicksburg, and two colored i, women: Va fireman: five colored ; cabin boys,, the second and third chamber- I maias. ana one roustaDont ; ' Jvardo; tne boat's carpenter Wm. Mistmaker second engineer; and all the cooks and , help except .1 iae pasiry-cooK. " xne Dooks ot tne. boat and the United" States ' mail were lost, to gether with 500 bales of cotton; : ; 4 : New OkiiBAKs,: September 80. The Xee had just been, overhauled and newly paint ed, and was" on her first trip ; this seasonl She left Vicksburg yesterday evening for New Orleans with 500 bales of oottoa'ahd a good list of , passengers; r While opposite Point Pleasantat 3.A., M;:. to-dayi, she discovered to be oir 'fire, andrwa'imlnedl ately headed fbr the Louisiana: shores and landed at Yucatan - plantation, 35 miles bo low Vicksburg, , In a few minutes she was completely enveloped in flames. l Twenty one persons are - believed to- 'be iost, Jinfelu-. ding many of thecrew. - ' ) . .: j The steamboat: 'J. M? Wniti' ftsaei4li wreck about 6 A.:M and took the remain ing passengers and ,crew- to Yicksburg.-Ji Rawlings .and Robt . Smith, pilots, werfc both burned and' otherwise' injured: t; The fire is supposed to 'have' originated ; in the cook room. Bo rapidlv did ; it SDread that it was impossible for .the passengers- or of ficers to save 'anything but -What they had on at the time, s Capt. Wi S. Cannon states that the steamer was owned by thfe estate of his father, i Cant Jno. W. Cannon, and her commander, Capt. W. W. Campbell. She was valued at1 1100,000, and insured for $50,000, mostly in local companies, wi; j The crew, was composed almost j entirely of "men who have been on the rivet twenty or thirty years' The" boat,- beside her sup ply :pump, had. a ndw. fire pump with A fourteen-inch: cylinder and abundance . of nose, . mere were always tnree watchmen on deck; " The Lee was Insured for 475.000 in the uEtna of Hartford, $2,50Q each iri tne JN ational, iunterpxise and Merchants of Cincinnati, and "$35, 000inNew Orleans companies. - , y1. ',--::-,; : j.-v. - . ; The f ollowmsr is the list of the nassen gers saved:' Thomas J. Shain, of Tensas, Louisiana: C. H.' ChaDman. Of the steamer Naomi . Garuke, of New) Orleans i J. Mi x oiuuui, , wi , Dfc. jjouib;. vultb. ; Aoranamsj of Chicago; ;.Henry Moses. - of ' Monroe; LouisianaT J.C. Slatt.: of NTew York; Hj Wi Neefus'ofNew-Ybrk; J.Mp Freed't man, of Vicksburg; J. B. Berger, of Eastonj rennsyivama; W., W;wish, of Carlisle,! Illinois; John H.Lodweysin,'of New On leans." Mrs. Searles.' of ' Vicksburff.' and- a lady with 8 children, name unknown. - , The Lee left this city last Tueadav her first trip for five months. ; The announces IISJanlJboaleoDt .win e heard with universal sorrow ; the. champion of the Mississippi waters, a favorite with all the people j from ? Vicksburg toi New Or leans. , JNamea alter tne greatest ot neroes and statesman: Her , destruction at the be-: ginning of the latter season and after having undergone a morougn overhauling, wiu dq a serious blow to her owners as well as tq the trade in which she has been so long and sd faithfully engaged.' ' 1 ' ,:j ;A I Once BelL second clerfcot tne ljee,:wno was up at the, time ,of the accident, says i I never saw : anything burn so quickly. ,1 was aft at the tune, and when I heard the alarm,' knowing that my partnerwho sleeps -ii i i on . At sounaiy, ana me oioer omcerswere iu greni. danger, I rushed up to awaken them. . The fire followed so fast that by the time I had them all up my partner had his hair singed, in getting down stairs from the hurricane roof, and I had to climb over the rail. I thought I was" gone at on time. -The boat. did not have much , cotton aboard. She; had just been freshly painted and she went just like gunpowder.' Mr, Bell says that; a nassen&er. who was interviewed, seems to: think the fire originated in the pastry rooms' of the cook house, although I aon t see, said the former,- what nre was aoing in. there that early, as the cooks are not called! before 4 o'clock. - . ; . - 1 ''j.' - Mrs. Dave Searls, with heonc presence of mind and : motherly devotion, grasped her sleeDinsr infant and. arraneine: a fife-; preserver on her person, ' jumped boldly! into the water. By: a disarrangement xtt the Jif e-Dreserver she was thrown upon her back and lost her grasp upon her child, i CaDt. Canrobell and survivine omcers au leave by to-night's train for New Orleans, and wiu bring out the steamer Ed. Richard-; son in place of the Lee next Tuesaay. , . . GEORGIA. a Government Official Acquitted of the Murder of .a Moonahlner Counter feiters Captured.;, , ,.( Atlanta,, September 80. Robt D. Bol ton, C.AS Miller Brent Treeland and Jas. T.'Self . Deoutv U'S. Marshals and Col lectors, charged with the murder of an old man named Jackson J. Hicks, in Gwinnett county Georgia, while . on afraid, have been on trial here in the U. S. Circuit Court since Tuesday. The; jury to-day rendered a verdict of not guilty. ' 1 t ' An asent of the Secret Service of the TJ. S.5 telegraphs i from; Cartersville,i Ga.,the arrest of Henrv May anda Ji. w . Ji-eliet, for counterfeltine. and the capture of 115 counterfeit silver dollars.. van4 moulds for making the same. ' -"' i - , . 'r-:VIRGINIA. ItXalicloua Defacement of a Monument In Hollywood Cemetery Death of a promlnenrxitlzen 'of Daaxllle--The Medical Collese TrouWe. , Richmond. September 80. A,monument recently 'erected in .Hollywood Cemetery, over the grave of a daughter, of ex-Presi dent Tyler, : was defaced last nignt. wxdb Tdranerv of a -statue of the -Madonna 'was brokeni'and -the words; "This is a botched job, were written underneath. ' 1 . J - The hew Board of Visitors of the Medi- ?al College of Vireinia has been in session since 11 o'clock diScussingIfthe affairs 1 of that, instilutaon. They seem determined to ighrtre the repulse they v met with ,at .tne hands ot tne J! acuity yesieruay.- ana -go- nn with their labors the -same as though they had full possession.' -'At 6 P. M. the Board adjoufried witthout: taking definite, action as to the present.. 7 'tM r DajjvhxeT September 0.-Capt. James T. : Luck ' once Mator of the city and several times editor of the Pittsylvania Tribune and Danville Daily News; is dead. ' .:r- rL The Retrablicans of : the . Second" B. G A District have nominated E.M.,Braytoa for congress. NO. 4tf THE j TARIFF COMMISSION: Baltimore Manufacturers of Cheinlejiiar ana fertilizers recorded a Bearing.1 - . . Py !elegrapn to the Morning Star.J I i$ i Baltimokb, September 29. Eieht of the' nine Tarifl! Ctoniniissionera.afritedhere this morning. A. brief morning session.- was held,- but no witness being present, a- recess was taken until 2 o'clock, at whiehtime the interests of manufacturers of chemicals and fertilizers containing sulphuric or mii-i natiu auius werexepresensea-oy fi. w afs.' Rasin, -of Baltimore. .. He said-tnat this Icj terest waS one of the - largest in the State, and was equally large in the Southern and Western States, -He. read petitions asking the Commission to 'make 'such recommen dations as will give to- American manuf ac-j turers of sulphuric and muriatic'acids and agricultural fertilizers such protection5 as they are entitled to. , They say that it does not stand to reason that American manri. f acturers, wth tiieir expensive plant, lii-ge capital and costly skilled labor, can compete wrtbHhe foreign ttrticle that costs the cont pounderof : artificial -ichemicals - nothing.i It was a common thin? for heaw mnda to be imported from' England and Germany. at merely nominal f feiehtSiV-and aiwholft? cargo had been known to be imported in ballast, whilst such eoods norild ; not hk Shipped from Norfolk -tot Savannah at less than from $2.50 to i3.00 ner- ton. ' Thfc manufacture of -these chemicals' and fer tilizers, had grown to be a business of great magnitude, from $90,000,000 to. $100,000 000 bein? invested in it in 'Baltimore. At lanta, Charleston,; New Orleans,Richmond and other cities. One-third of these invest ments in Baltimore were now idle, whilst the imports of, European cities had increased in five years from a few hundred tons to 75,000 tons in 1881; and, consequently ,tJ4 price of - sulphuric , acid, had fallen front f i.jsa per hundred pounds (giving a fait flving profit) to 55 cents, .involving aruinl ousloss. .. . .. ,.' .' . - .. 'Some half dozen similar petitions.' signed by the principal manufacturers of chemicals and fertilizers, were presented by Messrs! Rasin, of -Baltimore: Jackson'; of . New York, and Allen, of Philadelphia:, the een eral suggestion being that a duty of 30 per cent.' be imposed en foreign chemicals and that Spanish pyrites, or sulphur, ore- be ad mitted free of duty. , It was stated," how fever, 'that as to the latter point, there wal not 'unanimity 4 of sentiment among jChemi ical manufacturers, il ": ' v. , , " - .hdina. Fla.1 presented the claims of ; manuf acturers of palmetto fibre tb protection under the tariffi He said It had been found -by ? experimenf that fibre made - from palmetto could be Used in the making of matting, brushesi carpets, . hats. . . and cloth.1 - He asked that bamboo and rattan -rand .cocoa .fibres that are now on the free list,1 be taxed at front one cent per pound of iraw.inaterial to iour cents when partially F worked ,.into. rope orj fibre." He used a machine by which a tori of palmetto fibre ..was produced daily; hit competed with jute, -hemp, tampico, and almost all of those foreign fibres coming' from the palmetto famijy. 1 Continuation of the Bearlns at.Baltl- - ; "r '- more."-"" - "- I : , ; tBy Telegraph to ; the Morning Star. I " t BAiTucoBB. September' 30. The Tariff Commission to-day listened to several orai arguments - and written , communications tion.-1 aae exception was from Tne tincim :nati Zoological Society, , asking , free duty forbeasts and reptiles Of other: lands birds arenowj,;?fsi;:i jrfii.i The- Ctommission adjourned to meet at New York Monday. V 7. ':" - SOITTMSCAROLINA o Row at a' Politteal Meeting; In' Laneas ter Three Men .KIUed. and: Many Wounded. -4: f ' ! FBy Telegraph to theMornuucStar.V-'-'V J Charleston. September 28 A special to the News and Courier. Atom. Lancaster says: A political meeting here yesterday? was addressed by Col. CaSh. About the( 1 l .a. - la A 1U v Close 01 me meeting a uuuouiiy arose m, ui stand between' a white Democrat and a; colored man, which' resulted in the former being wounded in the head by a blow with a stick or stone."' At this time two or three: pistol shots were fired near the' stand, but ,-... n. ..... r j j , 1 no one. was nun. soon-aner mis. a largu procession, 01 colored - men ' on- norseoacE, came upon the streets,; one 01 tne numrjer. having a large pistol bu6kled . around his body. .The negro pointed; the pistol at a white man, and said, . "meres tne aamnea. rascal who did the shooting." iTThe white; man gave him the lie and the colored man fired. - Immediately several shots were fired; by white men ' and 'the1 colored man fell dead. vAjnumber "of .shots were then fired by white and colored men, and three other colored men were killed and many wounded.; The authorities soon succeeded in restoring quiet which now prevails, t It is believed that the trouble is over. ; " 1 ..-- OHIO. Theft of $12,000 Worth ,of Diamonds and Jewelry at the Cincinnati Ex position.'- f- ' 'J' 1 i ' ,IBy Telegraph "to the Morning Staf. ,-.-, t Cincxnkati. September - 28. Twelve thousand dollars worth of diamonds and valuable' jewelry were stolen at the Exposi tion building, shortly after the doors opened tms morning, iroin me exuiDii 01 j. kj. o. Kamp. The e diamonds . were insecurely kept in a show case fastened with two small pad-locks,; and the Owner had no' one in charge to- guard the property. - r Visitors to the Exposition saw wo men go to the case and open it with such apparent ease as to give the impression that they were the own ers. After selecting all they , wanted they otfietlv -walked away. Ten minutes after the theft was discovered, v ,, ., , , v. . .; 1 - , .:, .FOREIGNi ). S. Aflalrs In Ireland Mercantile Failure 1 vj f,-3-J';v Anti-Jewish Blots.' ? . S- u -4 ; t IBy Cableto the Morning Star.l , : DuBMif, September O.-Judge Lamson, while defendip his act in imprisoning Mr. Gray on legal . grounds, ; said he felt that iustice had now heeh vindicated, a better state of things .being observable; 4 - S. LojnjON, September S0.-4-Tamlaci &.Sons, shippers and merchants of Manchester, uaj cutta and' Bagdad,5 have failed; liabilities 15,wp. HiC vie v-t -r - 'JIW-X v VnatiTA. September 30. The anti-Jewish riots at Pressburg broke out again yester day evening and lasted until midnight; i -: ELECTRIC 8FABKS. . , Six steamers cleared c for. f foreign ports from New Orleans . yesterday? with 359,935 bushels 01 wheat, besides cotton ana oiuer cargoes. ; , ,- . ; . ? . mt . r It is estimated that, the rednction of the public debt for: the ..month, of September will be in the neighborhood of v sixteen jnu lion dollars. ..-;'' ars X Near Cornwall Station." on the -'Middle- town branch of the Western . Rauroad,' N. T. -,-yesterday, three1 men were killed and T . jv. . . . . r : a. - t.1 4. .-. ,, mree wauiy nuri py a premaiuic uioat. j ; Spirits ;Turpentine. Battleboro -is to..- have av new large brick warehouse t-. , .. ... 1 . Floating yarn : " A" Watermelon ' vine 990 feet in length grows at Salisbury JM. C. 7'. ..,,.) n , , ; In Tyrrell and several other' With, what is known as the "staggerfl.,i -, Greensboro Patriot : A coun- " D" " r jaBmcnuua ; last nignt insists -i that .'farmer - Rogbrs'', was none other- than Sauire Asa - Knio; ;church.:;:;4v.v.v; i- Oxford Free Lance; How does" Col, Ike Young stand in 5 his own. county ? Let this record speak. At the Vance Coun ty .Nominating Convention he was for Tom Hicks. B. H. Cozart was- for W. tH Smith.. Hicks got five votes: Smith got fifteen votes. -, ... r .v . ' Rockingham' IBeer c Mr.? B. F. Little fell from the platform of the" cars at ' Folkton on Tuesday,, and sustained terri-' ble ihj-anea. v --We wish the Star to -succeed. It is undonhteHlv .dailies in the South;'-: - : ' .'r r - . s Jihzabeth City Economist: Ben - j""uf. leiuetou; cued -: near Plymouth on Wednesday. .Also in Plymouto, Mrs. Sa rah Todd., : -The store and liquor estab lishment known as 'Bull Run," kept by R. -W. Sawyer and J. L, Snow; near Columbia was destroyed by fire on the night of the 19th instant -The work of an incendiary. Everything lost ; no insurante.:;- -. ,-. ' . Sfe Ravfgh Farmer and Mechanic , Three vacancies in Slateoflices Raleigh,, unless Jarvis has alreadv nlleil thorn o The new building at the Oxford Orphanage will bo dedicated October 20th, Senator Ransom1 -making the. address and Rev. J. K. Conally the sermon, . : Bros. ,Mc Diannid, of the Jcsonia7k and Erwin nt the Rutherford Banner,, have; accepted the 1?nrrierM01r f TlAn4a tI. ..&t V. T G. S. Bradshaw.reasurershiri: Rm.'wm: Biggs, Probate Judgesteh?; Bro. - J.. C. - uiacK, senatoranip m jloore; Bros. Hack ney and Webb,; the mayoralty and clerk- . snip 01 uurnamujro, rpote;; the Solicitor ship in Warten; Bro. EvansVeSenator from vuonoU)auu im:re uic Hume omers wnoso names at this moment escpeourehiory. - pleasure 10 note tnese promotions. Charlotte Journal: About the ast of next month it is" TrnhaH thai will have another circus competition even livelier than that of Barrett, and Maybury. Pullman and Hamilton. This time it will be between W. W Cole and Sella Bros., " both of whom are heading this wav. An assay concluded 1 by- Prof." Hannah, of the U. S. Assay Ofilce, of tlfe gold bearing Ore from the front vein discovered a dav or ' two since at the Pen-Johnston Coppermine, snows faia.ou to tne- ton. This vein, it will be remembered, as discovered in ma- -king a cross cut fori :a :, coooer vein ; Mr. J. R. Wallace,1, of , Cabarrus -county. sold - to" Mr; A J osiah'Asbury, a walnut log - i.uuf ,f.ixk in uiameier, ana not quite eleven feet long. Mr. Asbury sawed It up and got 700 feet of. good lumber from it. ,. .The log is the largest cut in this section for years. - Its value here is about $35. In the North it would be .worth from $75 to $80. . italeigh' News- Observer: Arms were yesterday" sent from the State Arsenal to two new companies of .the State Guard. These are the, Monroe 'Light Infantry, of theSecond Regiment,' and ; the ReidsvOle light Infantry,' of the Third ( Regiment. The white and. colored departments of the Institution for the Deaf.- Dumb -and Blind are now, in operation, 180. pupils be-' ing present As the audience at Tucker Hall- last Saturday evening f was looking with; delight at ' "Esraeralda'- the .scene wherein Dave Hardy, the young North -Carolinian," almost fainting, holds' a . glass of whiskey in his hands f or some minutes, ' moved a witty yodng attorney of this city to remark: ".Them ain't-North - Ca'Hnv time.'": There rwas a general- laugh at' the .. gallyt" "1 "Adam. Russell, a young negro from, Cabarrus ' county,: who' was yesterday placed in the Penitentiary, made fa half dozen attempts to poison the family: which employed him, but -thought several mem bers; of - tho:i family., were imade t sick, none died. An - attempt at poisoning is not a penitentiary offence, but it : happened that the negro stole the , bottle, containing r the poison strychnine.. So he was sent to the . fenitentiaryfor that offence. '- - - 1 s, -eldohf;;ivewr The .Wilmmg- Un STAB.'.has entered its sixteenth year. May it forever shine for the people, whose friend it is. v A revival has just been -ended in the Baptist Church at Jackson, conducted by the Kev. it. 1. vann. aix persons -were added td the church.. 1 . The fund for the purpose of getting a tablet 1. TT. L 1 ni 1. ... .V. Mr.. .Lowe grows. The address' of Mr.. Kingsbury is being rapidly sold to appli- ; cants -from all directions The Wil mington, &,Weldon Railroad;; Company has recently purchased ten new locomo tives, three 01 which have just oeen received. - On Friday last the lower end of the county was visited by one of the heaviest rains within the memory of the oldest in habitant. The railroad track in one or two places was displaced, crops were damaged, and . hogs and other animals drownea Nearly all the bridges in that section were washed up and other property injured. In Palmyra several stores were filled with wa ter up to the counters, and one was consid erably damaged by the flood. It .is to be hoped that no serious loss will be sustained by injury to the cotton, -r We have heard tnat tne people 01 scoiiana jecK, anu uiose living below, want the railroad extended to Hamilton, where it would connect with boats for Norfolk, the Elizabeth City Rail road at Edenton and with the railroad at nm. . .1. . . J 1 . 1 WUUamsion.. 11 is aiso reporwu tuaii uuicjso such extension is made a road will be built between Scotland Neck and Hamilton. An other report is, that the W. &lW. Railroad intends some time in the future Ja connect TnrhnrA and Rrntland Neck with a railroad. ; THE STATE, CAMPAIGN., Judge Merrimon made the most powerful speech at Graham that has been heard in these parts ; in many a day. Alamance Gleaner. - - "I have followed- the Republican tiag through dust and heat and have supported it faithfully; but if that banner must have a barrel or a still ,house . for a motto it no longer floats over me."--Judge Dick. - Col. John' R. Winston, the Greenback candidate' for Congress in- the Fifth Dis trict, stumped Maine, and as"a result Solon VaiaoV) bUV X a vwaawa vhhi- . r ernor, got , 1,298 votes in . the entire State, out of , a total of 138,175. Charlotte 0 server. ' . ' v The Greenback party held their County Convention at Lee's Mills onTuesday19th, and nominated Jocob Spear for the Legis lature, Rufus Swain for Treasurer, A.- H. Swain for Clerk of the Snperior Court, and Sam Johnston for Sheriff. Elizabeth. City Economist. .''- The court house was packed, a large number of the people being farmers, who, despite the busy season, had pome to hear the Democratic standard-bearer. We have not time ton otice the speech of CoL Ben nett at length this week, and will -simply add that everybody was well pleased." We predict for our candidate a rousing vote in Granville. OtottZ Free Lance ?. Col. Dockery had. an - appointment to speak in Lenoir last Saturday. We always try to be fair towards our political oppo nents, and weTtrust:that they will not ac cuse us of prejudice when we say that Col. Dockery's speech in Lenoir, last Saturday, -was a' failure. "It was a. complete break down"; there was a very, small crowd pre sent Lenoir Topic. - , -..r.- " - -.;-,- f, i !- ' '