'C.v.y-v.-"'' FUBUSHBD at WILMINGTON,: N.C ., $1.00 A YEAR. IN ADVANCE. 88SS3388SS28383SS ;qwoW si 8?Sg88SgSfgSiI 83888888883888888 " : 88833SSSSSS8S888S : 8888888.8888888888 : 82SS8SS8282883SS8 88833858838888833 ' 8288SS882S88S88888 ',l3aAV 8 ,0,o,t02aS35S2SS858 ' 88888888888888888 I i ;. i , . . ' I ' ' . . o i ;- 2 gi ;' " Si j 3 is s i 3 s s : I Entered at the Post Office at WUmtgton, N. C, as Second Claw Matter.l i SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, j The tubscription price of the Weekly Star U at Single Copy 1 year, pottage paid...;..... $1 00 " month. " , 60 A months P a months " i " 80 VERY IMPORTANT. - During the past two months bills have been mailed to about sixteen hundred subscribers to ,the Weekly Star. The aggregate amount due on these bills was very large, but the aggregate amount thus far paid is comparatively small- ! - ' It is hoped every subscriber in ar rears will read this "notice, and that he will forward the amount due us at . once. . J - . ! : It is unjust to the proprietor to read his newspaper without paying for it fully as .much so as for the proprietor of the! paper to eat. the farmer's chickens and eggs and then fail or refuse to remunerate him. - , We thank those of our subscribers who have paid us, and trust this ap peal will not be lost on those who have not paid. WHERE THE WEALTH IS. An effort is being made to stave off tariff legislation under the pre tence that if anything is done to dis turb the present tariff manufacturers mill Iia thMmn intn enrh a crarp nf uncertaintyvand uneasiness that they will reduce the number of their work men, and move with" the greatest r eaution until that question is settled and they can see iust what they have to "expect in the jway of protection and be able to form some opinions as to what they have to face. j There are some Democrats who are influenced by these representa tions, and are advising the go-slow course. They would probably be wil ling to indefinitely postpone! tariff reform and forget that the Demo cratic platform says anything about it or that two campaigns, both suc cessful, were waged upon it. Republicans in and out of ! Con gress have been trying to create the impression that the present financial troubles are mainly due to the ap prehensions of radical tariff legisla tion, and that the Sherman act (for the repeal of which, however, Re publican Congressmen voted with re markable uaanimity) played a very insignificant pattj It Is to be expect ed that they would talk that way, for there is both bluff and politics in it, but it was not to be expected that Democrats would agree with i them. The go-slow pressure comes, as might be expected, from the manu facturers who have been , growing rich out of the favoring legislation which they have had so long. ; They do not want to 'see any change, be cause they know they have a good thing and want to hold , on to it as long as they can.J. At the end of an- other hundred years their industries would be, as far as protection goes, quite as mucti "imams as they are now, and as dependent upon protec tion pap as they are now. ! As this is a matter of dollars in which patriotism figures very little one way or the other, we do not know that they are so much to blame, for they have been pampered so much and so long by the Govern ment they have come to look upon protection as a right! and not as a favor granted for a presumably lim ited period. j j . j The legislation which is j honest anchjust, is the legislation which aims at promoting the welfare of the people as a whole and not of any special class, and especially of any one class, at the expense of other classes, or of one section at the ex pense of other sections. , As s matter of fact in ; natural ad vantages, ' and productive resources, that portion, of the United States lying north of the Potomac , and east of the. Alleghanies is the poorest section within the bounds of the Re - public, the land as a general thing being below the average in fertility, There are fertile valleys, and lands made rich by industry and care, but these are the exception. There are also a few of those. States rich in iron and coal, but as a whole they bear no comparison to other sections of the country, Speaking of this Governor Fishback, of Arkansas, in a letter to the New York World says: "The census shows that Nebraska, Illinois, Iowa, Indiana, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana are fifty-eight times as large as Massachusetts and have seven times as many people; yet, within the past ten years Massachusetts has grown in wealth ten millions more than all nine of these great States combined. Pennsylvania has grown twelve millions more than twelve of these great States. New York has grown six millions more than fifteen combined. ' . ' :--r I r : . II 'II II II - . . . : .- - -. I I . II II A I I -J - V - .tW-VV v. 1 - 7 - II "W.. J II Y ' - - ' .- -: I. .V 'J- .. VOL. XXIV. "The nine industrial States of the Northeast own .one-half ot the wealth of the entire country. This wealth has been drained from the consumers of the South and West, making these States the debtor States and the Northeastern States the creditors." The question arises, how did these nine States manage to get possession of most of the wealth of the nation ? Their people are not any more .In telligent, thrifty, energetic or ' indus trious than therpeople of other sec tions, and their lands, at least in some portions, were so poor that the people went to manufacturing from necessity because they couldn't live without it.. .But they have become rich, are becoming richer every year, have more money in the banks of a few of them ; than, all of the agri cultural States combined, - while the agricultural States where manu-. facturing has not been introduced to an appreciable extent, ar poorer now than they were ten years ago How did these States which have be come rich, become so? Out of whom did the money come that made them rich? Not out of foreign nations, for they export but little, less than $90, 000,000 a year all combined. They have become rich out of our own people, out ofi the farmers of the West and the-South, and of the wage earners of-the country, from the heavy tribute imposed upon them by discriminating, iniquitous tariff, which transteis the earnings of the thousands into the pockets of the fa vored few. I I The Democratic party is pledged against that iniquity,- and the sooner it gets about redeeming that pledge the better it will be for the country and, for the Democratic party. MINOR MENTIOL'. It is said that some of the Repub- lcans in Montana, Colorado, and other States of the West propose to switch off from the Republican party and go in for.a low tariff to retaliate on the Eastern Republicans for the part they took in "the House on the repe'al of the Sherman act. As these have been . heretofore Republican ates they jhave, reason to feel wrath at the party which, to keep them in the Republican party, passed the Sherman act and then by an al most solid vote went for its repeal and against every proposition for the coinage of silver on any ratio. A majority of the Democrats voted for the Bland Allison act, but 113 Re publicans voted against it, showing that the only friends that silver had, with a few exceptions of Western Re publicans, are in the Democratic party. We are not surprised that they feel they have been badly used by the Republicans who played that act for the politics that was in it, and then wenl dead against it when there seemed to be more to be gained bv that course, than by standing by and defending their own work. The desertion was the more offensive be cause nearly 1 every Republican in Congress who spoke upon it and favored the repeal declared that he did not believe the Sherman act was responsible for the present financial trouble, which were, they said, due to a lack of confidence in the Dem ocratic party and to the fears of Democratic manipulation of the tariff. The ! Democrats who voted for its repeal were consistent because the Democrats in Congress solidly opposed to it in 1890, and have never since endorsed it, in National Con vention characterized it as a "cow ardly makeshift" and pledged the party to its repeal, but the Republi cans who passed it, played mum on it in their platform, and then after it had served its" purpose treacherously turued against it.' The' Silver State Republicans have good reason to feel like kicking out of the traces. ' Thursday cholera, Asiatic cholera, was reported in an English seaport town, and also in a Scotch seaport, brought there, by vessels from Ger man ports. Yesterday there was one fatal case and another probable case reported in Jersey City, where there wasn't the slightest apprehen sion or suspicion of its presence. It must have been brought into Jersey City by some of the passengers or crews of some vessel which doubt less "passed quarantine with a clean bill ot health. This shows that however vigilant the health author ities may be,1 cases' not sufficiently developed to .; attract attention may elude them, i The presence of the disease in Jersey City does not necessarily mean that it will spread, but the fact that it has made its ap pearance where it was not seriously thought ofj is calculated... to , cause some uneasiness and emphasizes the necessity of increased vigilance. . As a distributing center, if it should get a foothold, there are few places that would be more dangerous than Jer sey City, for that is- practically the terminus and the ; starting point of the railway system of the United States, from which trains, run in all directions. The recognition of : this fact will, doubtless, redouble the efforts to stamp it out and prevent it from getting a foothold there, but, in the meantime, the prudent thing for other cities brought close to Jer sey City by rail to do is to put them selves in the ; best possible sanitary condition, for cleanliness is the best safeguard when cholera or other epi demic diseases are in the air.I ;: Senator Vance made a strong speech Friday Jn opposition: to the unconditional repeal of the purchas ing clause of the Sherman act, in pur opinion, the strongest that has. been made in the Senate on that side of the question,"". He commanded the attention of the Senate, as he always does when he speaks, and he never speaks simply for the sake of speak- ng. He contended that the uncon ditional passage of the- repeal bill, although it pledged the j country to bi-mettalism" (as the platforms of both the Democratic and Republican parties had already done) without any provision for the" coinage of sil ver meant the end : of silver money for this generation, by which we sup pose he meant the end of silver coin age, and it cannot be disputed that he had good grounds for! the asser tion in the vote cast in j the House of Representatives on the coinage propositions, in the declarations of some of the leading members of the House in their speeches, I and in the comments of the anti-coinage papers after the result was announced. , They get things down fine in the U.. S. Treasury sometimes. The receipt of Treasurer Morgan to the outgoing Treasurer was for millions, thousands, hundreds of dollars and seventy-eight and two-third cents. It took considerable figuring to get that two-thirds, but it had to come. This reminds us of an instance in which the Government used up about $4.50 worth of stationery to get a quartermaster to account for a mis sing cent Uncle Sam may some times squander a good deal of cash, but when it comes to settling up ac- counts, he insists on an even bal- ance. - Entomologists tell us that the mosquito is a very useful insect be cause it. forages in the; swamps and eats up lots of stuff that would otherwise become ; putrid and poison the atmosphere. If that's so there are a good many mosquitoes that don't know their business or what they were invented for, that don't go into the swamps at all but persist in hanging about towns and the habita tions of men, carousing all night and feeding on live people.! That story about the cancerous growth which necessitated the cut ting of President Cleveland s jaw bone, - as published under naming head-lines by the Philadelphia Press, has had the stuffing knocked out of by Dr. Bryant, the President's physi cian, and by Dr. Hasbrouch, who as-J sisted in the operation, and says it consisted simply in the removal of two molars which had seen their xbest days and "occasionally- gave Mr. Cleveland annoyance. ) St. Louis foot pads are sportive cusses. iney held up a yonng society man the other only relieved him o inight and not his pocket change, &c, but also of his clothes, and then tied him to a staple in a wall in full glare of an electric light. In this predicament he was discov ered by a street car conductor, who generously lent him a scoot home in. waterproof to In addition to the other demands on Siam to which - Siam " submitted, France now demands that Siam dis miss the Danish officers in her army. It is a little remarkable that France didn't demand the disbandment of the army, or at least ttat French of ficers shbuld be substituted for the Danish officers dismissed. Storm Damage in Qeorgia. ' The Savannah News says: "Anything like an accurate estimate of the loss of property is yet impossible. Those who give estimates ot damages necessarily differ widely. It is pretty safe to say the whole damage done to all kinds of pro perty in Savannah, along the river and in territory tributary to the city, amounts to much more than $1,000,000. ' "No estimate can be made of the dam age to the cotton crop I in - the counties visited by the storm, nor of the damage done to the pine trees in the turpentine districts. . . "The cotton has been hurt badly, and from some reports received, it is pretty sate to say that twenty-hve per cent, oi the pine trees in the naval stores dis tricts have been blown down." Wreck News. The crew of the wrecked German barque Wurstrow were brought up to the city yesterday on the Wilmington from Southport and were quartered at the Seamen's Home, under the direction of the Geaman Imperial Consul here, E. Peschau, Esq. . .1 . Capt. Jos. W. Price, harbor master of the : port of Wilmington, Capt S. W Skinner, and Capt U gland, master of the Norwegian barque Bonita, went up the Sound yesterday : to Queen's Inlet to hold a survey on the Norwegian barque Najarden, stranded at that place. More Good Book. . -. .- : Special attention is called to the new book offer (second series) made by the Star. These books are by the best authors, and are from Jarge clean type bound in strong paper covers, and are supplied at little more' than one-third the retail price. Send one coupon and ten cents lor - each book or dered of this series, and give full title of book in every case. See advertisement or fuller particulars. - - pVTLMEON DISASTERS TOiSHIPPING. r3 8ohooner Enchantress Ashore Near Cape . Jj'ear Water-logged "- Schooner Jennie L- Thomas Frrins-Fan - Light-Ship All Reports of disasters to shipping by the storm of last Sunday and Monday are still coming in. . ' . . j ' :; Weather Bureau observer Dorman, at Southport,epbrted yesterday morning that the three-masted schooner nchant- ress, of NewYork, Capt Frank RoUent, with a cargo" : of ' railroad ties;' has gone ashore twenty-five miles south of Cape Fear, with deck load, boat, cabin and forecastle carried away. . The crew were three days without ; food or water. The mate was washed., overboard Sun- Aav niorht and the. rantam iniure.d. v.'" I - . i Alscv that the three-masted schooner Jennie Thomas, of. Savannah, -from Sa vannah to Baltimore, Capt. A. T. Young, with a cargo of lumber, is water-Ioeged and anchored twenty-five miles south of Cape Fear. No lives were lost. , V' The Schooner. Three Sisters, which went ashore Monday' night near Corn Cake Inlet, was pulled off by the tug Alex. " Tones and towed into South- port, ; arriving j there at 12 o'clock yesterday. She is in bad ' con dition,: water-logged, and cannot be hetd by her - anchors. The tug ' ones placed her on the shoal in order to keep her straight. I j- Assistant engineer Win. Harvey, of the Frymg-pan lightship, arrived at Southport yesterday morning on the tug Jones. He had one pf his fingers broken by being thrown into the engine during the hurricane Monday, lightship all right, aSd board well. He reports the everybody on MORE WRECKS REPORTED An Abandoned Barque Towed Into8ontb- port' by a British Steamer Vessels - Wrecked Near Shallotte Wreckers Itooting the Barque Queen's Inlet. stranded . Near The British! Steamer Eric, from Hampton Roads, arrived at South- port . yesterday morning at 11.30 o'clock, having in tow the abandon . 1 .... ed Norwegian barque Linda, which the steamer picked up at sea last Thursday, sixty miles south of Frying- pan light-ship. ; The captain put a crew on board the oarque. He reports Hav ing seen two abandoned schooners, lum ber-laden, near the place where he found the Linda. The tug Alex. Jones has gone, down the coast to assist two schooners reported dismasted and anchored off the bar near Georgetown, b. C ; Mr. R..W. McKeithan writing .from Supply, Brunwick county, to -Mr. D. L. Gore, of Wilmington, says that four large vessels were wrecked between Shallotte and Cape Fear. The crews of the two vessels which went ashore on Long Beach were saved, with the exception of one man. Long Beach Is between the mouth of Shallotte river and Lockwqod's Folly. The master of the Norwegian barque Najarden, strandednear Queen's Inlet not far from Wrightsville, was in the city yesterday to consult with Mr. Heide, the Norwegian Consul, in re gard to saving the ; valuable cargo of mahogany.' He complains that that wreckers have looted the vessel of everything of value that they could carry away. The schooner ennte 1 nomas, pre viously reported anchored two miles south of Cape Fear, in a waterlogged condition, arrived at Southport at 12 m. yesterday. i j A SERIOUS MATTER. Arrest of a number of Persona Charged with Ijootlng the Stranded Norwegian Barque Najarden All the Defendants Bound Over to the Criminal Court, Deputy Sheriffs King and Sheehan were busy Friday and a part of yester day serving warrants on persons charged with looting the stranded Nor wegian barque Najarden, on the beach near Queen's Inlet, some six miles be low Wrightsville. . " - The persons arrested were Jno. Pettit O. F. Corbett las. A.s Hewlett, J. P. Walton (whites), and David Jfoiles, Jos. Pickett and Jno. Sidbury (colored. A portion of the property taken from the vessel the captain s instruments, cabin ; furniture, clothing and other articles was recovered by the officers. Yesterday the accused parties appeared before; Mr. Alexander, ! a magistrate of New Hanover county, at Scott's Hill, for a preliminary examina tion. Hewlett and Walton waived examination and were placed under $500 bond each for appearance at the next term of the Criminal Court The bonds of the others defendants was fixed at $200 each, and all of them furnished bail with the exception of David' Foiles, who was committed to jail. , The case is one that is likely to be placed in the United States Court Sec tion 5358 of the Laws of the United States recites, that "every person who plunders, steals or destroys any money, goods, merchandise or other effects from or belonging to any vessel in dis tress, or wrecked, lost, stranded, or cast away upon the sea, or upon any reef, shoal, bank, or rocks of the sea, or in any other place within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the United States '" shall be punished by a fine of not more than five thou sand dollars and imprisoned at hard labor not more than ten years." ' W., H.SN.B. B. The Newbern Journal say that ground was broken there Friday for the depot building of the W...N. & N. R. R. As near as. can be judged, the running Of regular trains will commence about the tenth. At first only a passenger train will be run; but a mixed freight and passenger train will follow-as speed ily as the needful preparation can be made lor it : , Brig Onolaska cleared yesterday for Barbadoes, with 829,089 feet lumber, valued at $4,945, shipped by Mr. E. Kid der's Son. TH E LIFE-SAVERS. Good work of the. Crews and Citizens of Southport During the Beeent Storm In Saving The Lives of -Imperilled Sea- men. f The invaluable aid rendered by mem bers ot the life-saving service of the Cape Fear section and -citizens of 'Southport and the heroism exhibited by them in their efforts to - rescue the crews of wrecked vessels during the recent terrible storm on the coast can hardly be over- estimated." : - " ; On Monday morning the water-logged tbree-masted schooner Three Sistersvna sighted from the Cape Fear Life-Saving station, and danger signals were made by Capt. C - Wr- Watts to the schooner. to let go anchors: ': that he (the captain) t would render assistance as soon-.'as possible. ' The life-' saving crew not being on duty he went to' Southport,' about " seven miles from tie station,, in a small boat, and there collected snch of the life-saving crew as he could find Messrs. Sam'l Brink- ! man, SamT Newton, Thomas St. George, Jno. C. Price. Crawford Watts, Wesley Smith (colored), Mose Stephney - .. (colored) and ' volunteer citizens of Southport Messrs. Robeit Weeks and Jos. Newton. Capt. Watts then procured a large row-boat at South- port and proceeded with the crew to Oak I Island Lite saving station. Here he left the row-boat and got Capt. Dun bar Davis, master of the station, with his boat and apparatus. Capt Davis, taking command of the crew, proceeded to the rescue of the people on the Three Sisters, in the face of the terrible gale. They were six or seven hours in reach ing Com-cake Inlet Then they . had to leave the boat and walk five miles to Cape . Fear Station, where they obtained the : boat and apparatus be long! ng to that station, in charge of Capt. Watts. It was then 5 o'clock in the morning of Tuesday, but undeterred by their laborious progress, having been out . fifteen j hours in the storm, they launched the life-boat, and after an hour's struggle with the wind and the Waves reached the wrecked schooner and took the worn-out and ex hausted men from the rigging, where they had --been since Monday morn ing,! when the captain and mate were washed overboard and drowned. un their way to shore tney bad to use the drag attached to the life-boat to keep their little craft from upsetting, The boat filled with water four times, but being a self-bailer soon freed itself. Altogether, there were thirteen men in the boat They reached Southport about 10 a. m Tuesday. Upon their arrival at Southport, they saw distress signals flying at Oak Island Station, two miles distant, and without delay answered the call. They found - the j schooner, .-Hate. -E Giff', ord and the German brig Wustrow eight miles west of the station, showing signals of distress. The gale was still raging and the sea so high that it was found, impracticable to use the boat The life-apparatus and gun were therefore placed on a cart and hauled by hand through the deep sand and storm eight miles. They arrived on the beach opposite the Gifford at 7 o'clock in the evening, and. at once proceeded to use the apparatus. The life-line was fired from the gun. It lodged across the jib- boom of the schooner, but the crew were unable to find it. and the - life-savers remained on the beach all night When day broke the crew discovered the life-line, which they made fast and then hauled the breeches- buoy aboard, by means of which the cieW of the schooner were all safely landSd, and subsequently brought to Southport, Throughout all this trying experience -worn-out with fatigue, the hard row ing and the sixteen-mile tramp over the beach, dragging the heavy apparatus, and: drenched with rain, they were without food or drink; but : none of them faltered or . complained They were engaged in the noblest efforts that men can make for their fellow-men, and were ready to dare all and sacrifice even life itself in their behalf. It must be remembered- that the life- saving crews are not on duty during the summer months, their term of service beginning September 1st and continuing until May 1st, and that their services were voluntarily given. It is strange that the Government, knowing that the worst storms on the South Atlantic coast occur during Au gust does not at least extend the term of the life-saving crews to coyer this month. They should, indeed, be on duty throughout the year. - The men from the brig Wustrow were assisted ashore bv a citizen of Bruns wick whose name is unknown. He was on the beach and waded into the'surf to meet the men as thrown up by the waves and assisted them to a place of safety. But for him some of them at least would have lost their lives. " I THE SCHOONER CATAWAMTEAK, with a cargo of sugar, from Macaris for New York, ' disabled in the hurricane, came up to the city yesterday. Capt Rowe, master -of the' schooner, re ports that previous to their arfival at Southport the crew had been forty-eight hours without food or crater. During the storm the lazarette hatch was mg over the stern of the vessel. He caught it, and as soon as he could get a man put of the rigging, he, with the man's assistance, secured the hatch by spiking it down. - The second officer of the vessel was lashed f o the wheel, where herhad one leg fractured, and was badly bruised, which left the master without asssist- ance. r::- r'i';j;v. Capt Richards, master of the schr. Battt'e L. Sheets, savsthat he and his crew were without food or water from Saturday noon until their., arrival at Southport Wednesday afternoon. i "Mr. W. J. Toomer has been ap pointed cashier of the Atlantic National Bank in place of Mr. H. W. Howard, who resigned. Mr. Toomer has been book-keeper in the bank lor some months past Mr. Howard, who has filled the position of cashier most ac ceptably, proposes to take a trip out West . : THE. GREAT STORM i FURTHER PARTICULARS OF THE DE- -: ; VASTATION. ,l Over - Five Hundred Lives lost on the .Sea-Islands The Cotton Crop Serioaaly Damaged Disasters to Shipping Missing Steamships, i v yr-r-J - ..-' By Telegraph to the Morning Star, Columbia, S. C, Aug, 81. Accounts continue to come in of general havoc by Sunday's storm. Thousands of valua ble timber trees have been blown down, crops washed away, and the rivers fare full of flotsam ana jetsam of the djsas aster. Advices from the sea coast jmay be summed up in the following extracts irom to-day s Charleston papers: l ne long-stapie cotton crop has met with a serious injury, and the estimates are that where in former years Charles ton received . 10,000 bales - of sea-island cotton, this year she will do well to get 3,000 bales. That is the' situation in a nut-shell as viewed yesterday by those who are in the best position to do I anv talking. The reports indicate that! the sea-islands met with the - heaviest dam age, while the uplands fared somewhat better. j " . , - w w ment, gives me lonowmg story oi the effects of the storm in the low country: He had just arrived from WalterborO and stated that from Bischoff's place on the .disto river, to lacksonboro, two negroes floated the whole distance on the top of. their shanty, and reported that all the negroes on the place in the lowlands had been drowned; in all about 100 men and women and children. They relate a ter rible experience and -furthermore state that all of the dwellings are totally de stroyed and the place in abject desola tion. - . . ' I M At Waterboro. Mr Robinson said. many of the houses had been completely washed from their foundations out into the streets and all the rice fields are overflowed. l The steamboat Pilot Boy, familiar to every sdul on the inland route between the cities of ' Charleston and Savannah, has been stranded and more or less in jured. The pilot fleet of the harbor is wrecked or stranded. The phosphate works which are located on the banks of the neighboring river are in little better condition. . - ?. Port Royal, lying on a tongue of land further down, the Beaufort river j must have been even more exposed to the fury of the tempest. The place is prac tically in ruins. Its water front is de stroyed and great damage has been done to its buildings. The great loss Of life which resulted from the storm on every shore of the islands, is greatest here, or else it I has been more authentically stated. ( Thirty odd negroes were! found dead on the beach, and the number was expected to be largely increased j "before the death roll was finally dosed. It is needless to add that the crops were injured j terribly. Fifty per. cent loss would probably not be too large an esti mate to make, r Several gentlemen from this city, who were in Port Royal or Beaufort during the hurricane, returned to Charleston yesterday on the first train which came into the city over the Charleston a Savannah Railroad., They report that the loss of life and the destruction of property at those places and the neigh boring sea ; islands nave beenj leartui. The death roll had already risen to thirty odd persons, among whom was numbered Dr. Ellis, the newly appointed quarantine officer for the port. Paris Island, 'where the U, S. dry-docks are building, and which stands between the Broad and' Beaufort rivers, was swept by the cyclones. The ! fatality which has pursued the Government im provements since their inception found its culmination on Sunday night - The injury could not be '- accurately cal culated. . ! i Beaufort, the prettiest island town in the Carolinas, is terribly damaged, not withstanding the fact that it stands six. miles up the Beaufort river. Many of the residences in the town were badly damaged and the wharves are nearly or quite destroyed. l he experience oi tapt wniteiy ana his wile and family ot ten children on Castle Jinckney on the night of the storm was a terrible one. The wind blew the store houses to pieces, and blew away all the" ship chandlers stores and his dwelling was so exposed that it was seen to be dangerous to remain in it. I He and his family sought shelter irom the mry of the tempest to the leeward of the fort, and with his children he stood lout the storm with occasional waves breaking over the helpless family. Three of the littleones were from six months to three years of age, and stood it like the old ones, without a whimper. The fury of the winds and waves was so great that some huge masses of iron used for hoiding buoys and weighing 4,- 500 pounds: were moved from their places and roiled about the beach. Some great anchors, weighing tiom 4.500 to 6,000 pounds, were thrown about the place like so much timber. The place is a complete ruin, and in spite of it all, Capt Whitely and his brave family are still on the castle and are holding the fort. The missing steamer Seminole, about which so much anxiety was felt steamed into the harbor yesterday morning with scarcely a scratch on her. She! and her passengers escaped from the horrors of the storm which swept the coast When the "Seminole" met the hurricane she was off the mouth of the St John's river, and was preparing to head in for the entrance. Her officers appreciated the situation at a glance, and! making out to seaward lor a considerable dis tance, turned the vessel s nose into the eve of the cyclone and cast out their anchors. - I The caDtain said she breasted the wa ter like a duck during the long hours of the storm, and was not injured in the least when it naa subsided. - As soon as the wind had lulled, he turned her into the St John s ' river and made his dock in Jacksonville in perfect safety. His return was unevent ful except of the evidences pf the storm which was witnessed at several points, The little watering place which stands at the mouth of the bt John s river was a perfect wreck, and all along the banks of the stream damage was apparent The passengers did not think that the coast of Florida had sustained. nearly so much loss as that ot south Carolina, Inquiry at the Clyde Line offices elicited little information regarding the other missing steamer, the Yeamasee, further than the bare statement that she had left her dock in New York Saturday afternoon. Even her passenger list is unknown. She should have arrived in Charleston at 7 o clock on the . morning of the 29th, making her forty-eight hours over due. The officials of the company, while naturally-anxious to have some intelligence ot the vessel s crew ana passengers are not alarmed tor her satety, They do not think the delay necessarily alarming. Even if the Yeamaseeonissed. the brunt of the storm snej must navel had weather bad enough to throw heri far behind time. The Italian bark Vinceno GalatolaJ which left this port for Hamburg on the 16th, was abandoned at sea off Hatteras on the 24th. - Her sails had been blown away, and her - foretopmast was gonej NO. 44 and she. was otherwise disabled," when fortunately the whaling, schooner Hattie b.. smith, Capt. Bourne, which had also suffered damage, came alongside and gallantly rescued the crew of the bark. . Washington, Aug. 81. The Charles ton News and Courier ot the 80th, re ceived here by mail, says : ."There has not been the faintest tick of a telegraph nstrument in this city since about 3 o'clock on Sunday afternoon. What is still more discouraging, there is nothing to indicate that we shall be able to com municate with the outside world for two or three days, or possibly a week." I he News and Lourter incidentally re marks that this edition of the paper was set up by candle light; that "the avail able j: supply, of candles was exhausted about 2 a. m., which necessitated the leaving out of four columns of news about the cyclone." : - ; ; liaads, -"tne outlook last night was very; cheerful for a city without either gas or electric light, . telegraph or tele phone. But Charleston has wresled with and overcome difficulties much more se rious than this one. Charleston may be depended upon to 'get there.' " savannah- GA Aug. 31. lacob Paulsen left this morning for Coffin Point. S. C. to brinor the survivors of the . wrecked steamship City of Savan nah J here. Reports of the disastrous work of the storm are still coming in. The entire coast is strewn with wreck age debris, and vessels are high and dry in exposed harbors. " The bark Clara E. McGilvery, Bull River, S. C... loaded with phosphate, was torn from her moor ings' and dashed upon the shore. ine beach and inlets are hlled with wrecks oi small craft. Dr. William Dnncan and C. H. Cunningham, who have been missing since the storm, have been heard from and are upon their way to the city. : v. s Beaufort, N. C, Aug. 81. The cap tain ot the bark Anna is .nere with all nis crew, i hey turned the vessel over to the tug-boat men for .salvage. The schooner AnnaT. Ebner is anchored under Point Lookout in a safe harbor. She is making 1200 strokes per hour with her pumps; has lost anchor and chain and split mainsail. Augusta, Ga., Aug. 31. Receiver Averill of the Port Royal & Augusta road, wires the Orwir& ""to-night that the! loss of life on the sea-islands of South Carolina far exceeds anything yet reported, and will not fall far short of six hundred. Great destitution exists among the seven thousand remaining in naoitants, and urgent appeal is made for aid in the shape of provisions, crops and provisions having been entirely de stroyed. I Savannah, August 31. The tug that went to Coffin Point, near St. Helena ight-house, to bring back the women and children wrecked on the steamer City of Savannah was expected to return by 6 p. m., but had not arrived here at lu p. m. -. . .. 1 j A great many dead animals that were drowned in the storm are floating down the river. About 8 p.m. the body of a little girl about 8 years old floated down. it is not yet known whether black or white. It is reported this evening that twenty-four bodies floated up on the lower end of Hutchison island near Screven's ferry. The report is not yet verified and cannot be verified to-night. It is considered doubtful. If Dr. Duncan and C M. Cunningham, thought to have been lost on Wolf Island, where they were hunting, and for whom a rescuing party was sent, are all right. Dr. Duncan came to the city With the rescuing party: Cunningham remained to look after a wrecked boat II ! Augusta, August 31. A special from xeamasse, near fort Koyai, s. c, says the facts are worse than reported. Sir hundred are dead; two millions loss on property. 1 Every one of the ! fifteen or twenty islands lying around Port Royal and Beaufort are steeped in sorrow. On every door knob there is a bunch ot crape and on everyi hill-side there are fresh-made graves, some already filled. while others are awaiting the bodies that will be deposited in them just as soon as some body can be found to do the kind, Christian act of shovel ling the dirt upon the coffin. The beaches, the undergrowth, the trees and shrubbery, the marshes and the inlets are turning up new dead bodies every time an investigation is made. Of the many disasters and devastations which have visited jhis section of the country, hone have been half as horrible as those which came Sunday. Already more than 200 bodies have been found, and those who are at all posted about the country and the habits of the people In the storm-visited sections are confi dent in their prediction that the death- roll will run as high as 500. Some of the people, and they are among the best people oHhis section of the State, even place the loss at more than one thous and. There has not been an hour of any day since the early hours of Monday morning that a dead body has not been found at some point on one of the many islands. As the waters recede and the people move deeper into the wreckage gathered by the storm the ghastly pic tures are uncovered. So frequent are the discoveries that the finding of a Single body attracts no attention at all. It takes the discovery of at leastatlump of haij-dQ?en or more to induce the people to show any feelings whatever.' It is around Beaufort and Port- Royal that the death rate was the greatest, but in neither ot the : towns were many lives lost At Beaufort, only, coffins were bought to supply the local demand, while fort Koyai got on even lighter. Around the two towns there is a com plete chain of islands, and it was upon these that the black angel of death hov jered for hours Sunday night leaving in his path sorrow and desolation. THREE MEN HANGED. One for Murder and Two for Arson, at Laurens, 8. C. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Laurens. S. C, Sept. 1. John Fer guson, Wade Cannon, and George Bow ers, all colored, were hanged at one o'clock to-day in an out-building of the county jail yard, r erguson was con victed of wife-murder at the last court, and Cannon and Bowers of arson. Fer guson was neatly dressed,' and walked with a sprightly step to the scaffold, ac knowledged his guilt and said he was ready to die. Cannon and Bowers pro tested their innocence to the last, stating that their former confession was made through fear. A colored minister held devotions at the gallows. -' . WARM "w! RELETS. A hurricane passed over the Azores' on August 28th. Two vessels were wrecked in the harbor of Fayal and four teen houses were destroyed in the town. At Tlerra three vessels were wrecked and twenty-eight houses were destroyed. Five persons were killed. , The British steamer Legislator, from Liverpool for New Orleans, put in at Nassau, N. P., with the American bark, E W. Stelsan, from New York for Ha vana, in tow. The bark encountered a severe hurricane during the passage and was leaking badly. . Three men were washed overboard, and the captain and six men deserted the vessel at sea. The second mate and six of the crew remained on board. - ,i s : - ;.: - : Newbern Journal; : Mr. -W. A. White died &t his residence, in this city Thursday morning, of malarial fever,- v alter an illness of three weeks duration, in the 27th year of his age, J ' - - ... Sanford Exfiressx The crops in this section are said to be finer than for years. ; Cotton is not so very large but" is well formed and is heavily boiled. It r is now opening in places and 'is earlier . than for some years. Corn is excellent. especially late corn. , r - warremon necora: eaton Wil liams, colored, -a well digger, one day this week, while in the bottom of a well . at Dr. Fleming's, had a rock to fall from" ' the wailing at the top of the well and -strike him on the head. It stunned him' for awhile, but he was soon all right , There can be no doubt about the thick- ' nessof Eaton's skull. - . - Scotland Neck Democrat: MfT G. W. Ryan has one acre in com which he planted or 100 bushels, and had it not been lor the destructive winds which have repeatedly injured it we believe he would have got it - It is the finest up land corn we have seen. A number of gentlemen looked at it a few days ago and said they thought he would get 75 bushels from the acre. ; Winston Ssntinal: Officer Pfohl received a letter this morning from the Mayor of Radford, Va, stating that a . -negro who gave his name as James Gra hanK alias Jim Greer, had been arrested -" there on suspicion of feeing George . ,. . Broadnax, who stands charged with the , murder ot a man named Roner. in Leaks- ville, N. C, a few months ago. The ne gro in custody answers the description of the man wanteg. , Chatham Record; After a pro- tractecTsickness Mr. William F. Foushee died at his place on last Friday, in the ' 68th year of bis age. He was one of Chatham's most prominent and popular ' citizens. One night last week the barn and stable of Mr. J. A. Gilliland, of Matthews township, were destroyed by fire. The loss is estimated at tl.500, with no insurance. The fire is thought - to have been of incendiary origin. . " Charlotte News: The farmers in the city to-day reported that the crops were damaged considerably by Monday's storm.' The cotton was whipped to pieces, and many ot the bolls knocked off, but the crop will be more than or dinary, because there never was a year ' when every stalk was so loaded 'with fruit The corn, and especially late com, is badly damaged. The late corn is down on the vground and can't mature well, while the early planted corn is matured, and will hardly suffer much from the wet Meadows are damaged more than any other crop, the grass that is on them now being almost ruined. IjzmmbmzExcfiange: On Friday morning about three o'clock the Metho dist church was set on fire and before the fire company could muster their force the flames had made such headway that it was impossible to control them. The church had just been repaired at a cost of $750 and it was a beautiful structure. It was insured for $1,500 but the loss is not halt covered. It is very unpleasant , to be compelled to publish to the world that even the house of God is not safe in Laurinburg and it is inconceivable how- posoned a heart must be his who . laid . this church in ashes. . The Parsonage. just in the rear of the church was saved by the heroic efforts ot the tire company. Raleigh News and Observer: The Railroad Commission yesterday dis posed of the following business: Nor folk & Southern Railroad Company to the Railroad Commission. This was an application to exempt the telegraph line , between Plymouth and Bell Haven irom circular No. 25 of the Commission, de scribing joint rates for different lines. Application was denied. Atlantic Coast Line to the Railroad Commission. This was a petition asking -for special rate on meal from Washington j to Golds boro under the sixth section) of the act creating the Railroad Commission. Pe tition iwas allowed. Wilmington Seacoast Kaiiroaa company to tne Kanroao com mission, l his was an application to re- . duce the assessment made by the Rail road Commission for taxation. The ap plication was denied. Laurel River & Hot. Springs Railway Company to the Railroad Commission. This was an ap plication to exempt the property of this Company from assessment while its road is being . constructed. Application was - denied. Weldon News: " A "white man was here Saturday exhibiting a, colored one on the streets whose attractions con sisted in his being able to untie himself. No matter how tied, he could extricate himself with ease and dispatch. -He was both deaf and dumb. Friday about 9 o'clock, John Burwell, liviug near the - fair urounds, was robbed ot his ciotnes and shoes on the public highway, by two ex-convicts only just liberated. .Word was sent to Weldon to be on the look out for the thieves, and in a short time both were arrested, a man and boy, In the confusion the man broke and was chased to the river but not caught. A requisition was made on the State farm for Mr. Studivant and his hounds, but he could find no trace of the thief" after he took to the water. However, ; late in "the evening, several gentlemen , who chanced to be up the canal, saw the negro soon after he emerged from the river; wet and dripping, about a half a mile i above where he entered. . Not -knowing their powers he was not appre- 1 hended, but walked quietly up the road. Saturday morning be was arrested near town, at a house where he applied for something to eat Mayor Gooch, after hearing the evidence, committed him to the county jail to await the action of the , grand jury in November. The boy was discharged, , Charlotte Observer: Fount Hiatt. a big mulatto, made a brutal attack Tuesday upon his wife, Lydia Thomp son, in Greensboro. Hiatt went to the shanty where his wife was at work wash ing clothes. Her back being turned . towards him she did not notice his en trance until he said, "Lyd, I have come to kill you," and at once grabbed her by her throat and commenced stabbing her. She was covered with cuts on head and shoulders. There were nine cuts alto gether. The physicians ini attendance on her took out three pieces oi. ner skull this . afternoon and there ft no probability of her recovery.; Hiatt im mediately gave himself up 'to the auv thorities, and stated that he hoped he had killed her. His intention was to get a pistol and shoot his wife and then kill himself, out tailing to ao tnis ne borrowed a common pocket-knife with which he did the work. Hiatt and his wife have not lived together for a num ber of years, as Hiatt was so trifling she would not allow him around. He had threatened her life before,' but had failed , up to this time to accomplish his purpose, It was all a mistake. Mr. Money's telegram misled Charlptte gunners, and they in turn misled the people,- Col. Anthony did not win the championship of the United States, that honor being ' carried off by J. W. Conner, ot Knox-; ville, by a record of 98 out of 100. Col. , Anthony won the Peter Cartridge Com pany trophy, a silver cup, his score be ing 47 out of 50. The cup is to be con tested for yearly, the moneyed advant age in winning it being hat the year following the winner is entitled to 40 per cent of the , entrance money. Col. Anthony and Mr. Todd made about 90 per cent each during the shoot. i ' ' - m hi . vl 3 A Jacksonville dispatch says there is no yellow fever in Florida. The State has a clean bill of health. A dispatch from State Health Officer Porter says that the sickness of Newman, at Port Tampa, announced on the 29th as yellow fever, is not really, yellow lever as re- Birted. as a subsequent diagnosis shows, e has since declared all restrictions off and people may go to Port Tampa and come at will. . v v, .- : v. .'-:M '""SI IS 7::: ' y '4. ft I -Si! 'j v- ' , 1 v - ? i '1 -I -3 . - ... . r K .. V'":-- 'li . ' ,.-